ALEMTSAHYE Gebrekidan
was 10 when her childhood came to an abrupt end. 'I was playing
outside and my mum called me inside to the house,' she remembers of
the day her world changed forever.
'She
said "you're going to marry". I was surprised and I cried
but I didn't say anything to them [her parents].' Her wedding, to a
boy of 16, took place just two months later.
Shocking
though it might seem, her experience is by no means unique. According
to World Health Organisation figures, 14.2 million girls under the
age of 15 are forced into marriage each year.
Most
come from India, the Middle East, and like Alemtsahye herself, from
sub-Saharan Africa - Niger, Chad, the Central African Republic and
Ethiopia among them.
The
consequences are appalling.
Along with an education and childhood cut
short, girls suffer a traumatic initiation into sexual relationships,
are put at risk of domestic violence and STI's, and have the chance
of a career or better life taken away.
Worse,
many also die in childbirth or from pregnancy-related complications -
the leading cause of death for girls aged between 15 and 19 years old
in developing countries, according to UN figures.'
Child
marriage is an appalling violation of human rights and robs girls of
their education, health and long-term prospects,' comments Babatunde
Osotimehin, executive director of UNFPA.
'A
girl who is married as a child is one whose potential will not be
fulfilled.'
It's
a view with which Alemtsahye agrees. Now 38 and living in London, she
says she still feels angry with her parents at times and says her
life was 'ruined' by her early marriage.
Girls aren't the only victims of Early Marriage
'I was in school,' she remembers, 'although I stopped the school when I was married. I do have happy memories of childhood - it was just eat and play.'
All
that ended when it was decided she would marry a boy, who until the
day of their wedding, she had never met.
'I
didn't know him,' she says. 'I was OK when I saw him - he was a child
like me. He was upset as well, the same like me... he was 16 years
old.'
As
Alemtsahye's story reveals, girls aren't the only victims of forced
marriages, although as Jacqui Hunt, London Director of campaigning
charity Equality Now makes clear, their experience is often far more
traumatic.
'Boys
do get married young and that is an issue that needs to be
addressed,' she explains. 'But the majority of child marriages
involve girls.
'Also,
boys tend to marry girls same age or younger while girls marry much
older men. Boys also aren't taken out of education while girls run
the risk of early childbirth and all the complications that brings.'
While
Alemtsahye was, at least, given a husband closer to her own age, the
wedding meant leaving home, leaving school and beginning life as a
traditional Ethiopian wife.
'I
was collecting water, wood and cooking for my husband and the days
were like that,' she remembers.
'The
water was far away and not near to our house. We would go far, then
come back and I would cook for my husband.'
A mother at 13
By the time she was 13, Alemtsahye, although still a child herself, had a baby son, Tefsalen, now 25, to care for as well.
She
remembers the pregnancy and birth as a traumatic time, made worse by
the fact that her immature body couldn't cope with the physical
demands of carrying a baby.
'When
I was pregnant, it was painful and I cried,' she recalls. 'And also
when the baby was delivered it was so painful because I was a child.'
But
if pregnancy was difficult, motherhood was even tougher and made
worse by the fact that in 1989, Ethiopia was in the throes of a
vicious civil war.
A Widow & single Mom at 14
The conflict, which raged intermittently from 1974 until 1991, eventually left more than 1.4 million dead, among them, Alemtsahye's young husband who was just 19 when he was killed fighting with rebel forces to overthrow Ethiopia's barbarous Marxist dictator, Mengistu Haile Mariam.
'After
the baby was born, there was a very bad war, and my husband, they
took him, and he was 19 years old and he was dead in the war,' she
says, her English slightly halting as she remembers.
'I
was a widow at 13 and when [my husband] left me, he left me with a
one-year-old baby. It was very hard. Very difficult for me left
behind with a baby and still a baby myself.'
And
although she hadn't wanted to marry her husband, Alemtsahye says she
still feels sad when she thinks of his short life and how little
enjoyment he had.
'I
feel sorry for him because he did not enjoy his life,' she says. 'He
married young and finished in a war that ended his life. When I see
his son, I sometimes cry.'
Left
alone with only her son, Alemtsahye was left vulnerable and soon fell
into the hands of traffickers, tempted by promises of a better life
abroad.
Victim of Human Trafficking
Leaving her son with her mother, she travelled to Egypt where she worked as an unpaid domestic servant.
But
just two months after arriving, more traffickers appeared - this time
promising her a new life in the UK.
'I
was smuggled to London by Arab people,' she explains. 'They said:
"you are working with us and we will take you to London".
They brought me and then they left me here.'
Still
just 16-years-old, the former child bride was now an asylum seeker,
initially placed with a foster family because of her youth but
swiftly moved to a tiny flat of her own.
She
went back to school and learned English and now helps to run a
charity called Girls Not Brides which aims to help former child
brides from Ethiopia.
Her
son, now 25, lives in the Ethiopian capital, Addis Ababa, and grew up
with his grandparents, only seeing his mother during her occasional
visits home.
'It
was so hard, very difficult,' she says frankly. 'I was thinking how
to bring him to live with me [in London] but I can't bring him now
because he's in his 20s. I tried last year and they said no.'
Did
she ever worry that her parents might try to marry him off at a young
age as well? If they had, says Alemtsahye, she would have found a way
to stop the wedding.
'I
told him: "Never ever think to marry young! I wanted him to get
educated so I said to him: "look at me, I am your mother, look
at everything that messed up my life!"'
'He
is a carpenter,' she adds. 'I am very proud of him now!'
Giving back to the Community
Although Alemtsahye's story has a happy ending, she's aware that the problem of child marriage shows no signs of going away and, if WHO estimates prove correct, could become increasingly widespread over the next five years.
'I
would say to girls, don't marry. Enjoy your childhood and go to
school - learn. For me, I feel my childhood was robbed. I missed my
education - I ended up empty - with nothing! I learned everything in
London.'
And
for the parents of those girls, her message is stronger still. 'Why
do you damage his or her life?' she asks.
'Send
them to school to study. Do you know the problems that come with
marrying off a child so young? They will miss their childhood.'
Source : MalaysianDigest
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