Behind the ancient way of life for the Tuareg tribe of the Sahara is a culture so progressive it would even make some in liberal western cultures blush. More after the cut...
Women are allowed to have multiple sexual partners outside of marriage, keep all their property on divorce and are so revered by their sons-in-laws that the young men wouldn't dare eat in the same room.
What is even more surprising is that even though the tribe has embraced Islam they have firmly held onto some of the customs that would not be acceptable to the wider Muslim world. It is the men, and not the women, who cover their faces, for example.
Photographer
 Henrietta Butler, who has been fascinated by the Tuareg since she first
 followed them through the desert in 2001,  once asked why this was. The
 explanation was simple.
'The women are beautiful. We would like to see their faces.'
But
 this is certainly not the only place the Tuareg, related to the Berbers
 of North Africa, differ from the Muslim world of the Middle East, and 
even other parts of their own continent. 
Before a woman marries, she is free to take as many lovers as she wants.
'They turn a blind eye,' explained Butler. 'The young girls have the same great freedoms as the boys.' 


Any visitor
 who goes to a camp would be vastly underestimating the power of the 
women in the tent if they believe their sole duty is to make the food 
and look after children.
In
 fact, she owns the home and the animals. And the animals are an 
invaluable resource to the Tuareg in the middle of the Sahara.  
Journalist Peter Gwin recalled
 an elderly nomad once telling him: 'Animals are everything to a Tuareg.
 We drink their milk, we eat their meat, we use their skin, we trade 
them. When the animals die, the Tuareg dies.'
Many
 marriages end in divorce among the Tuareg. And when it happens, it is 
the wife who keeps both the animals and the tent. And it is she who 
normally decides that she’s had enough. 


|  | 
| 
It is the men who 
cover up their faces, while the women are happy to show off their faces -
 although they often cover their hair | 
It is unlikely there will be any quibbling over who gets what. Pre-nuptial agreements are the norm.
In practice, this often means a man is forced to return home to his mother, possibly with just his camel and nothing else. 
His wife, meanwhile, will keep possession of everything she brought to the marriage and that includes the children. 
The
 mother's camp, Butler explains, is the root of the community, the home 
everyone returns to - and this arrangement ensures it stays that way. 
And
 there is no shame in divorce. Families will often throw their daughters
 a divorce party, to let other men know they are available once more.
But this is not a matriarchal society, where the women are in charge. 
Butler
 explains it is still the men 'who sit and talk politics'. But even 
here, the women can be deferred to. They are often consulted for their 
views by their sons or husbands, and are quietly pulling the strings 
behind the scenes.  
However,
 Tuareg society is matri-lineal, which means the families trace their 
lines through the women, rather than the men, right the way back to 
their first queen.
So, Butler explained: 'Traditionally, the man would belong to the woman's group, rather than the other way around.'
The
 preference for the women's line goes as far as man leaving his 
possessions to his sister's son as it 'is considered a stronger link to 
your family than to your own son'.
In
 other words, it can be guaranteed that your sister's child belongs to 
your sister, rather than a man's son, who cannot be absolutely 
guaranteed to share his genes.
But
 there is one tradition which is certainly far more unusual: it is 
highly rude for a man to eat in front of a woman who he cannot have 
sexual relations with, or any of his elders. 
In front of his mother-in-law it is especially shameful.
'I
 didn't realize this until the I was having dinner with a Tuareg woman, 
who had brought her son-in-law as her traveling companion,' Butler 
recalled.
'We
 were all sitting down to dinner, and the man has his back turned. She 
said the poor man was completely horrified because he has to eat with 
his mother-in-law.' 
But
 it is unlikely he would have ever complained about it, or felt sorry 
from himself. The very idea is horrendous to the Tuareg.
'You would shame yourself. The Tuareg will go to great lengths to maintain personal dignity. They will suffer,' said Butler.
'If they are not offered water, they won't ask for it - even if they are thirsty.'
Perhaps
 for this reason, the Tuareg welcome is legendary. They never forget to 
offer water, and travelers who appear on the horizon will always be 
'treated like a king'.







 
 
 
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