Picture Dictionary and Books Logo

A girl who demanded school

There's a group of people in Kenya. Voice Reading
People cross oceans to go see them. Voice Reading
These people are tall. They jump high. They wear red. And they kill lions. Voice Reading
You might be wondering, who are these people? Voice Reading
These are the Maasais. And you know what's cool? Voice Reading
I'm actually one of them. Voice Reading
The Maasais, the boys are brought up to be warriors. Voice Reading
The girls are brought up to be mothers. Voice Reading
When I was five years old, I found out that I was engaged to be married as soon as I reached puberty. Voice Reading
My mother, my grandmother, my aunties, they constantly reminded me that your husband just passed by. Voice Reading
Cool, yeah? Voice Reading
And everything I had to do from that moment was to prepare me to be a perfect woman at age 12. Voice Reading
My day started at 5 in the morning, milking the cows, sweeping the house, cooking for my siblings, collecting water, firewood. Voice Reading
I did everything that I needed to do to become a perfect wife. Voice Reading
I went to school not because the Maasais' women or girls were going to school. Voice Reading
It's because my mother was denied an education, and she constantly reminded me and my siblings that she never wanted us to live the life she was living. Voice Reading
Why did she say that? Voice Reading
My father worked as a policeman in the city. Voice Reading
He came home once a year. We didn't see him for sometimes even two years. Voice Reading
And whenever he came home, it was a different case. Voice Reading
My mother worked hard in the farm to grow crops so that we can eat. Voice Reading
She reared the cows and the goats so that she can care for us. Voice Reading
But when my father came, he would sell the cows, he would sell the products we had, and he went and drank with his friends in the bars. Voice Reading
Because my mother was a woman, she was not allowed to own any property, and by default, everything in my family anyway belongs to my father, so he had the right. Voice Reading

Table of Contents