Agony of a Child Bride!!!
My Name Is Fatima Mustapha. I Am 21 Years Old. I Am
From Makarfi In Kaduna State. I Would Like To Share My Divorce Diaries With You.
I was
married off at age 11. In my village, most of us were married by age 12 to
preserve our purity. I am still not sure what that means. I never thought it
would happen to me because my parents allowed me to attend school instead of
hawking and I loved school alot. In my school nobody made me do extra work
because I was a girl. I loved school because I loved coming first and being
ahead of the boys in my class. I was in JS2 when my mother started talking
about getting me married. I honestly thought she was joking until my uncle
brought his friend to our house as my suitor.
My
suitor, Malam Faruk was a shoe seller and cobbler in Zaria. He was 42 years old
and my parents felt he would make a good husband. I did not understand what
they were all talking about. I really did not understand what I would do with a
husband. So that’s how Malam Faruk started coming to our house with my uncle
with wraps of suya and juice from the city. I liked the suya but I didn’t want
him to be my husband. He said he had 2 wives and he wanted to make me his
third. He said his last daughter was in JSS 2 like me. He told me that when we
got married I would stop going to school and bear him beautiful babies. I
thought he was mad. I wanted to stay in school and become a nurse. I loved
nurses in their immaculate white uniforms and how they had the solution to all
problems at the health centre in my village.
I told my
parents I didn’t want to get married. I wanted to write my exams and beat the
boys in my exams and I wanted to play with my friends.
My mother
said those things were for girls not women. She said being married would make
me a woman. Well! me I didn’t want to be a woman. I liked being a girl.
My father said I had had enough education and there is no need for me to
continue my education. Despite my protests, a date was set for the wedding. I
will never forget that day. I cried and cried. My friend Halima told me that
what husbands did to wives was very painful. She said her sister bled to death
after she was taken to her husband’s room. I was scared. I believed I was going
to meet my death in Malam Faruk’s room.
On my
wedding day, I was in tears while my mother was full of smiles. I really could
not understand what was happening. I consoled myself that I would just go
through the ceremony and on Monday I would go to school.
That
Monday never came. My first night was a terrible experience for me. After our
uwargida bathed me and poured perfume on my body, she escorted me to Malam
Faruk’s room. He came into the room. I was shaking like a leaf. I was scared
but I knew I had to fight for my life or I would die in his room. He ordered me
to take off my clothes and I refused. He said he wanted to see my breasts. I
told him I didn’t have breasts. I was 11, which nonsense breast did this man
think I had? My uncle must have lied to him. But he didn’t like my reply and
came towards me to undress me. I fought him off as hard as I could because ‘Ni
ba yar iska ba Ce’ and he wanted to do ‘iskanci’ with me. I fought with all my
might. I can still remember the smell in that room and the way he nearly broke
my arms. The way he fought me like an equal till my strength was finished. The
way he tore my dress and raped me; the piercing pain. The way I was so weak I
couldn’t even move. I just lay there and cursed my parents for letting this man
do this to me. I waited for death to come but it didn’t come.
In the
morning my husband sent his wives to take and clean me up. As they cleaned me
in the dirty bathroom I asked them if this was how they were married too and
none of them answered me. They all had sad expressions on their faces. They
looked like they pitied me but were afraid to talk to me.
All they
said to me was that I was now a woman. I should stop asking too many questions
like a little girl. I should behave like a woman and not fight my husband in
his room. Our eldest wife, Maimuna said:
“Any
woman that refuses to allow her husband enjoy her will end up in hellfire. Any
woman that fights her husband because he wants to enjoy her will end up in
hellfire. Any woman who talks back to her husband will end up in hellfire. Any
woman that asks her husband too many questions will end up in hellfire. Fatima
you are now a woman. Don’t behave as if you are a little girl again, you hear!
I don’t want you to end up in hellfire”
I quickly
learnt that anything we did to displease our husband was going to lead us to
hellfire. Our husband was of the Izala Sect and he took his beliefs to very
extreme levels.
We were
not allowed to go out. We had to wear niqab if we were outside our rooms or in
the courtyard. We were not allowed to talk to each other a lot, especially in
his absence. If he was beating you, you couldn’t fight back, because
fighting back will land you in hellfire. You could only apologise for your
offence and say thank you. We were not allowed any male visitors even if they
were our fathers or brothers. When leaving for the market, Malam Faruk would
lock all our individual rooms because he said Allah ordered all believing women
to stay in their rooms. We had food but we couldn’t go to hospitals because he
said it was a place of sin and hell dwellers. Whenever any of us was ill, it
was ‘Fatiha kafa bakwaispit’ into a cup of water and mentholatum. No hospital.
I got
pregnant and I honestly did not understand what was happening to my body. I was
changing always and it seemed my body was stretching itself. My small belly was
struggling to stretch itself to accommodate the growth inside me and my skinny
legs couldn’t support me. I was always sick and mostly confused during my first
pregnancy. I kept praying for death. I prayed to die with my pregnancy or while
giving birth so that I would get to heaven and not hell.
And
really while I was in labour I kept saying Alhamdulillah because I was sure God
had answered my prayer. The pain was so much I thought I was going to die. I
was in labour, locked in my room with my co wives speaking to me through the
walls until Malam Faruk came home. My co-wives helped me and I delivered a baby
boy. I was very disappointed that I had not died. Now what will I do with this
baby?
I wasn’t
allowed to go home for the customary ‘wankan jego’ but my mother came to take
care of me. She told me there was something wrong with my baby. He was always
sick with a fever and he cried incessantly. I really did not care. I didn’t
feel any attachment to the baby, despite his being named after my father. I
just wanted to die.
I told my
mother of all my ordeals hoping she would take me away, but she refused.
“No
daughter of mine will be ‘abazawara’(divorcee). God Forbid! You must stay in
your home and learn to be patient with your husband and adapt to his ways. You
will not disgrace me by leaving your husband! You better forget about school
and face your marriage, especially now that you are a mother.”
I decided
to accept my fate. My co-wives seemed to have abandoned anything outside their
husband, so I joined them. Our children were not allowed to stay with us beyond
2 years. After weaning, he took them to his mother where they attend ‘Islamiyyaa
soron gidansu’. They did not go to school or learn a trade. They just learnt
Islamic education. Maimuna told me that four of her daughters were married with
children. She told me she was 30 years old. She told me that her cousin in Kano
had a scholarship program and tried to get Malam Faruk to enrol her daughters
into school but he refused and gave her a brutal beating. She said she gave up
after that.
My other
co wife, Kamila was 18 years at the time and she had never had a child that
stayed alive more than 8 months. Malam Faruk said she was possessed by ‘jinns’
and they killed her babies. He gave her regular beatings to banish the demonic ‘jinns’
within her. She was always confused and spoke to herself a lot.
When my
son was weaned, Malam Faruk asked me to resume matrimonial duties but I
refused. I figured if I refused him long enough, he would be frustrated and
take me back home. And that’s what I did for 6 years. I endured all the
beatings and rape. I stayed adamant despite his beatings. I refused to return
to his room. One night he beat me and beat me but I refused to let him win. I
think he saw the defiance in my eyes and decided that he was tired of raping me
for 6 years.
He called
Maimuna and asked her to pack my things. He said he would take me back to Makarfi
first thing in the morning. He said he couldn’t continue staying with a
stubborn devil like me as his wife. He told me that some time at home would be
good for me to learn how to behave like a good wife. I said thank you and
limped back to my room.
I
couldn’t wait for morning. I couldn’t wait for my freedom to come.
When we
got to Makarfi, I was shocked when my parents pleaded with him to take me
back. They refused to collect my divorce letter. Despite my swollen face
and bleeding wounds, my parents were more concerned about being disgraced. I
was so angry. I couldn’t believe what was happening. Even my own father that
had not seen me for almost 7 years was pleading and begging Malam!! I was
disgusted. Thankfully he left his letter and went back to Zaria.
My
parents treated me like a leper. My old friends refused to associate with me.
And relatives shunned me. I was a disgrace. I was a divorced woman, damaged
goods. In the eyes of society, I was no good. They said I was not a good woman
for refusing to stay in my matrimonial home.
Thank you
for reading my story. I hope you educated city people will intervene to stop
your relatives from behaving like my parents in the village. God bless you.
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