An ancient tradition is helping girls in Zimbabwe fight child marriages
SHAMVA, Zimbabwe (AP) Inside a white tent with a wooden fireplace in the middle, about two dozen African girls slipped off their shoes, sat on mattresses and prepared to pour their hearts out.
They held hands and their chants of its so nice to be here echoed through the tent before they set about discussing sexuality, child marriage, teen pregnancy, gender bias, education, economic empowerment and the law. Nothing was off limits.
The girls hangout in rural northeastern Zimbabwe is a revival of Nhanga, the local term for girls bedroom, an ancient traditional space once used to prepare adolescent girls for marriage. Across rural Zimbabwe, girls are now reinventing the centuries-old practice as a peer-led movement to resist child marriage, which is rife in the southern African nation.
This is a safe space, every girl feels free, said 18-year-old Anita Razo, who joined at 14 and now mentors younger girls.
https://apnews.com/article/zimbabwe-child-marriages-nhanga-tradition-81c5dc6633afe92ebabf785e2a05f337