The tribe where women are brutally flogged for marriage (Scars of love) watch Video.
Hamar
people are a community inhabiting southwestern Ethiopia. They live in
Hamer woreda a fertile part of the Omo River valley, in the Debub Omo
Zone of the Southern Nations. They are largely pastoralists, so their
culture places a high value on cattle.
In
the tradition known as Ukuli Bula, women are whipped as part of a Rite
of Passage ceremony for boys, when female family members declare their
love for the young man at the heart of the celebration. The boy is then
allowed to marry since the ceremony makes him a man.
A key element of the ceremony is the whipping of young women who
are family members or relatives of the boy undertaking the
Rite-of-Passage.
The
women trumpet and sing, extolling the virtues of the Jumper, declaring
their love for him and for their desire to be marked by the whip.
The women instead of fleeing beg men to whip them again during the ceremony held in the Omo River Valley,
Once whipped, the girls proudly show off their scars as a proof of
their courage and integrity.Some whipping appears to be tender, others
more fierce
WATCH VIDEO BELOW



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