Masai c sexual practices
The Maasai traditional culture still values some harmful and traditional practices (HTPs) that violate human rights. FGM refers to all procedures involving partial or total removal of the external female genitalia or other injury to the female genital organs for non-medical reasons.
At the age of the boys are encouraged to associate themselves with the men. These relations are referred to as children's ‘play’ in the local vernacular, and as such fall within a larger moral order of age and gender. The Hidden Crisis Exploitation in Maasai Culture While in many cultures sexual engagement is legally permitted among adults who are able to make rational judgment of love and consent, there is a hidden sexual practice in Maasai culture which exploits children inducing and coercing them to have premarital sexual engagement with adults.
39 Serious Games 39
Children, 2. There is no particular social obligation boys have as children. Elders ; and how they have changed over time. The Maasai are one of the oldest communities in the world and are known for their proud identity as well as their deep-rooted cultural traditions.
The most prominent indigenous tribe of southern Kenya is the Maasai, a pastoral tribe that resides in the most rural region of the country. While there are some gender roles that have stayed the same for hundreds of years, modern influences and factors have gradually led to changes in gender roles and responsibilities.
For hundreds of years, these roles were practiced conventionally, but over time they are slowly evolving with the advent of modernization.
Harmful Traditional Practices HTPs
This article discusses sexual licences and prohibitions among the Maasai of Kenya and Tanzania with particular reference to the institutionalized yet controversial sexual relations between young pre-menarche girls and adolescent unmarried men. The boys start carrying sticks with them that symbolizes his future as a herder.
Throughout their life cycles and in their practical lives, Maasai subjects participate in several sexual 'games', which are deeply social practices drawing people into wide and intense s of interaction and sociality.
Both boys and girls are encouraged to behave well in front of the elders. Young Adults The young boys often take care of the calves and lambs.
An Exploration of the
The prevalence of practices such as female genital mutilation or cutting (FGM/C), child or early and forced marriage, and sexual and gender-based violence (S/GBV) continues to be one of the greatest obstacles to the realization of the SDGs in.
This exhibit explores the roles defined by Maasai society for 1. Adulthood, 4. The goal of this field study was to assess the cultur-al needs, sexual health and education of the Maasai population. Women, on the other hand, take care of the house, raising children and fulfilling other household duties such as fetching water and firewood, milking the cows, cooking for the family and constructing the house.
Maasai girls take self
However, at an early age young boys may herd calves and lambs closer to home. They are largely in control of negotiations, decision-making, and conflict resolution of their homes, clans, and communities. This Christian tribe, whose primary language is Maa, com-prises 99% of Narok County, a district located near the Tanzanian border of Kenya.
This is further joined by a spear indicating the aspiration to become a warrior.
- Understanding Gender Roles in
Traditionally, the girls played with dolls made out of mud or jack made from stones or berries. The birth of a girl in a Maasai family, like that of a boy, is normally greeted with a lot of ululation from the village women. Married Adults, and 5. The community passionately focuses on shaping and nurturing the personality of a child.
At an early age the girls help with the wellbeing of younger siblings and keep the mother company doing household chores. Young Adults, 3. Traditionally, Maasai men are born and raised to be warriors to protect their livestock. The Maasai society and culture are defined by their gender roles as much importance is given to them.
Sexual relations, moreover, cannot be analysed in isolation from other social relations.
Female Genital Mutilation and
Female genital mutilation (FGM) remains a deeply ingrained cultural practice among the Maasai people of East Africa, particularly in Tanzania and Kenya. Children The Maasai children love to play; boys construct miniature kraals using twigs or stones.
Maasai girls are taking up martial arts to protect themselves from sexual abuse and violence stemming from early marriage.