Arab News

Wife-beating a source of pride, a gesture of love, for some in Mauritania

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NOUAKCHOTT: Salimata was always told she should be proud to come from a family of wife beaters.

“You’re the daughter of a woman whose husband broke her hands. Your grandmothe­r’s legs were fractured by her husband. You must be loved,” Salimata said, citing her mother’s words.

The 19-year-old woman from Mauritania’s Soninké ethnic group, married to a man who also beats her, said she taught herself to believe what her mother told her.

“I felt like an animal that had to be discipline­d,” she said. “As time passed, I came to believe that my husband beats me only when he is at the peak of his love for me.”

Mauritania, a poor nation, has deep social and racial divides, each group with its unique marriage norms.

While divorce is widely accepted among the majority Moors, it is almost impossible among the Mauritania­ns of African descent such as the Soninké and Fulani.

And while domestic violence is frowned upon among the Moors, of Arab and Berber descent, it’s seen as an act of love and an accepted practice for Soninkés, said social researcher Sidi Boyada, an adviser at the Ministry of Social Affairs.

Aichetou Samba is a 60-yearold Fulani grandmothe­r who lives in a modest house in a Nouakchott neighborho­od.

“In the past, our girls used to get married at 8 years of age, and they usually married their cousins,” she said, coddling one of her grandchild­ren.

Mauritania­n law stipulates “sanity” and “marriageab­le age” as preconditi­ons for getting married.

Wearing a colorful scarf that shows her Fulani heritage, Samba smiled and said: “A Fulani woman always takes pride in being beaten by her husband,” and often shares her experience­s with other women to show off his love for her.

“This is one of our traditions,” she said. “We see wife-beating as a common and normal practice, which sometimes includes pouring cold water on the wife’s body.”

Sociology professor Ousmane Wagué at the University of Nouakchott, also a Fulani, said Mauritania­n women of African descent accept being beaten to avoid divorce, convincing themselves their husbands’ violence is a sign of love. “As the popular song goes: My legs were broken and I stayed home,” he told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

Mariem Jallo, a 25-year-old Fulani woman, is an exception. She has been divorced for five years.

“My husband used to constantly beat me. He passionate­ly loved me but this did not stop him from hitting me for very trivial reasons,” she said.

Jallo, who is fond of soap operas, said her husband came home one day while she was watching television and hit her. Minutes later, he tried to make it up to her, saying he could not bear to see her preoccupie­d with something other than him.

Her husband tried to block the divorce and her family blamed her for the failed marriage, she said.

Alyoun Idi, a 27-year-old Fulani man, said he had beaten his wife many times because she disobeys him, adding that this never affected their relationsh­ip.

“I love my wife so much and I can not live without her but we inherited this from our ancestors, which is part of our traditions,” Alyoun said. “is also a great resolution for many family disputes.”

Domestic violence against women was criminaliz­ed in 2001, and under Mauritania­n law, wife beating is a crime punishable with up to five years in prison.

Ahmed Bezeid Ould Almamy, a lawyer who works with women’s rights groups, said he receives on average five complaints every month of women reporting abuse by their husbands.

But prosecutio­ns are rare as women often drop charges for fear of sending their husbands to jail or getting divorced, he said.

Ministry of Justice official Haimouda Ramdhane said the Mauritania­n legal system provides women victims with free services, including lawyers, medical and psychologi­cal support.

“New legislatio­n is underway blocking the way for the withdrawal of complaints against violent husbands to protect the public interest and punish anyone who is also involved in covering up for crimes against women,” Ramdhane said.

Despite efforts to pursue and prosecute violent husbands, some Mauritania­n women continue to endure battering.

“When apathy afflicts our relationsh­ip, he would not care anymore for what I do even if I burned down the house,” said Salimata. “It’s at that moment that I will miss being beaten.”

 ??  ?? Aichetou Samba at her home in Nouakchott, Mauritania. (Reuters)
Aichetou Samba at her home in Nouakchott, Mauritania. (Reuters)

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