By Sharon
LaFraniere
The New York Times
Wednesday 11 May 2005
But they hunted her down, she said,
and insisted that if she refused to exorcise her dead
husband's spirit,
she would be blamed every time a villager died. So she put her
two small
children to bed and then forced herself to have sex with
James's cousin.
"I cried, remembering my husband,"
she said. "When he was finished, I went outside and washed
myself because
I was very afraid. I was so worried I would contract AIDS and
die and
leave my children to suffer."
Here and in a number of nearby
nations
including Zambia and Kenya, a husband's funeral has long
concluded with
a final ritual: sex between the widow and one of her husband's
relatives,
to break the bond with his spirit and, it is said, save her
and the
rest of the village from insanity or disease. Widows have long
tolerated
it, and traditional leaders have endorsed it, as an
unchallenged tradition
of rural African life.
Now AIDS is changing that. Political
and tribal leaders are starting to speak out publicly against
so-called
sexual cleansing, condemning it as one reason H.I.V. has
spread to 25
million sub-Saharan Africans, killing 2.3 million last year
alone. They
are being prodded by leaders of the region's fledging women's
rights
movement, who contend that lack of control over their sex
lives is a
major reason 6 in 10 of those infected in sub-Saharan Africa
are women.
But change is coming slowly, village
by village, hut by hut. In a region where belief in witchcraft
is widespread
and many women are taught from childhood not to challenge
tribal leaders
or the prerogatives of men, the fear of flouting tradition
often outweighs
even the fear of AIDS.
"It is very difficult to end
something
that was done for so long," said Monica Nsofu, a nurse and
AIDS organizer
in the Monze district in southern Zambia, about 200 miles
south of the
capital, Lusaka. "We learned this when we were born. People
ask, Why
should we change?"
|
|
|
Sex "cleansing" of widows is practiced in Mchinji
and elsewhere.
(Graphic: The NY Times) |
|
In
Zambia, where one out of five adults
is now infected with the virus, the National AIDS Council
reported in
2000 that this practice was very common. Since then, President
Levy
Mwanawasa has declared that forcing new widows into sex or
marriage
with their husband's relatives should be discouraged, and the
nation's
tribal chiefs have decided not to enforce either tradition,
their spokesman
said.
Still, a recent survey by Women and
Law in Southern Africa found that in at least one-third of the
country's
provinces, sexual "cleansing" of widows persists, said Joyce
MacMillan,
who heads the organization's Zambian chapter. In some areas,
the practice
extends to men.
Some Defy the Risk
Even some Zambian volunteers who
work
to curb the spread of AIDS are reluctant to disavow the
tradition. Paulina
Bubala, a leader of a group of H.I.V.-positive residents near
Monze,
counsels schoolchildren on the dangers of AIDS. But in an
interview,
she said she was ambivalent about whether new widows should
purify themselves
by having sex with male relatives.
Her husband died of what appeared to
be AIDS-related symptoms in 1996. Soon after the funeral, both
Ms. Bubala
and her husband's second wife covered themselves in mud for
three days.
Then they each bathed, stripped naked with their dead
husband's nephew
and rubbed their bodies against his.
Weeks later, she said, the village
headman told them this cleansing ritual would not suffice.
Even the
stools they sat on would be considered unclean, he warned,
unless they
had sex with the nephew.
"We felt humiliated," Ms. Bubala
said,
"but there was nothing we could do to resist, because we
wanted to be
clean in the land of the headman."
The nephew died last year. Ms.
Bubala
said the cause was hunger, not AIDS. Her husband's second wife
now suffers
symptoms of AIDS and rarely leaves her hut. Ms. Bubala herself
discovered
she was infected in 2000.
Ms. Nsofu, the nurse and AIDS
organizer,
argues that it is less important to convince women like Ms.
Bubala than
the headmen and tribal leaders who are the custodians of
tradition and
gatekeepers to change.
"We are telling them, 'If you
continue
this practice, you won't have any people left in your
village,' " she
said. She cites people, like herself, who have refused to be
cleansed
and yet seem perfectly sane. Sixteen years after her husband
died, she
argues, "I am still me." Ms. Nsofu said she suggested to
tribal leaders
that sexual cleansing most likely sprang not from fears about
the vengeance
of spirits, but from the lust of men who coveted their
relatives' wives.
She proposes substituting other rituals to protect against
dead spirits,
like chanting and jumping back and forth over the grave or
over a cow.
Headman Is a Firm Believer
Like their counterparts in Zambia,
Malawi's health authorities have spoken out against forcing
widows into
sex or marriage. But in the village of Ndanga, about 90
minutes from
the nation's largest city, Blantyre, many remain unconvinced.
Evance Joseph Fundi, Ndanga's
40-year-old
headman, is courteous, quiet-spoken and a firm believer in
upholding
the tradition. While some widows sleep with male relatives, he
said,
others ask him to summon one of the several appointed village
cleansers.
In the native language of Chewa, those men are known as fisis
or hyenas
because they are supposed to operate in stealth and at night.
Mr. Fundi said one of them died
recently,
probably of AIDS. Still, he said with a charming smile, "We
can not
abandon this because it has been for generations."
Since 1953, Amos Machika Schisoni
has
served as the principal village cleanser. He is uncertain of
his age
and it is not easily guessed at. His hair is grizzled but his
arms are
sinewy and his legs muscled. His hut of mud bricks, set about
50 yards
from a graveyard, is even more isolated than most in a village
of far-flung
huts separated by towering weeds and linked by dirt paths.
He and the headman like to joke
about
the sexual demands placed upon a cleanser like Mr. Schisoni,
who already
has three wives. He said tradition dictates that he sleep with
the widow,
then with each of his own wives, and then again with the
widow, all
in one night. Mr. Schisoni said that the previous headman
chose him
for his sexual prowess after he had impregnated three wives in
quick
succession.
Now, Mr. Schisoni, said he continues
his role out of duty more than pleasure. Uncleansed widows
suffer swollen
limbs and are not free to remarry, he said. "If we don't do
it, the
widow will develop the swelling syndrome, get diarrhea and die
and her
children will get sick and die," he said, sitting under an
awning of
drying tobacco leaves. "The women who do this do not die."
His wives support his work, he said,
because they like the income: a chicken for each cleansing
session.
He insisted that he cannot wear a condom because "this will
provoke
some other unknown spirit." He is equally adamant in refusing
an H.I.V.
test. "I have never done it and I don't intend to do it," he
said.
To protect himself, he said, he
avoids
widows who are clearly quite sick . Told that even widows who
look perfectly
healthy can transmit the virus, Mr. Schisoni shook his head.
"I don't
believe this," he said. At the traditional family council
after James
Mbewe was killed in a truck accident in August 2002, Fanny
Mbewe's mother
and brothers objected to a cleanser, saying the risk of AIDS
was too
great. But Ms. Mbewe's in-laws insisted, she said. If a
villager so
much as dreamed of her husband, they told her, the family
would be blamed
for allowing his spirit to haunt their community on the
Malawi-Zambia
border.
Her husband's cousin, to whom she
refers
only as Loimbani, showed up at her hut at 9 o'clock at night
after the
burial.
"I was hiding my private parts," she
said in an interview in the office of Women's Voice, a
Malawian human
rights group. "You want to have a liking for a man to have
sex, not
to have someone force you. But I had no choice, knowing the
whole village
was against me."
Loimbani, she said, was blasé. "He
said: 'Why are you running away? You know this is our culture.
If I
want, I could even make you my second wife."
He did not. He left her only with
the
fear that she will die of the virus and that her children, now
8 and
10, will become orphans. She said she is too fearful to take
an H.I.V.
test.
"I wish such things would change,"
she said. |