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Beni
Amer Marriage custom
Sudan Notes and Records II, 1919.
RED SES PROVINCE.
The following note is intended to give some idea of the
marriage custom as practised by the Beni Amer tribe. It
may be mentioned that each section of the tribe regards
itself as free to modify or amplify the details here set
down.
On the day appointed for the marriage ceremony to
commence the male and female relatives of the bridegroom
leave him at home and with singing and rejoicing proceed
to erect the bridal hut. The material for this hut are
as follows, Seven pieces of white bursh.
The usual number of bent poles over which to stretch the
bursh.
Pieces of zaf, i. e. leaves of dom palm, wherewith to
tie the bursh to the poles.
An angareb or even simpler form of bed.
Some pieces of hugarit, the local name for a hematite,
which is found in Eritrea.
The above intentioned materials are put on a camel and
conveyed to the spot
arranged where they are all taken off and laid upon the
ground.
The male relatives now lake the camel and go themselves
to the house of the bride's father. They are met with
derisive shouts by the female friends of the bride who
seal the testimony of. their regard by bespattering the
visitors with dung.
(This form of play is indulged in by the bride's female
friends for the ensuing seven days.)
Nevertheless they return with the men, who load the
camel with an angareb or some form of couch and proceed
singing to the site of the new hut.
The bridal hut is now erected by the female relatives
only of the bride and bridegroom: The hut is partitioned
into two portions by fixing up light hangings.
Water is next poured over the pieces of hugarit and the
resulting solution is taken and
splashed over the poles supporting the hut and huge
rough crosses are made on the bursh above the entrance
to the hut with this same solution.
This ceremony is said to be carried out in commemoration
of the tragic murder of the father of the first of the
Nabtabs who was beheaded by the Christian King Bulo on
the morning following the first night after his marriage
with the king's own daughter.
(This man is reputed to have been a "holy man" called
'Ali Belas, to whom the King Bulo
took such a fancy that he gave him his daughter in
marriage. On the morning after his first bridal night,
he was, for a slight breach of etiquette in the presence
of the king, summarily beheaded. His one night bride
bore him a son, Mohammed Diglal ibn Mousa, the first of
the "Nabtabs".)
The ceremony completed, the bridegroom on horseback
appears upon the scene accompanied by horsemen and
camelmen who encircle the hut seven times. After the
procession has completed the seventh circle, the whole
mounted body with a shout, gallop for about half mile in
a line due south of the hut. (The reason for going in a
southerly direction is because in ancient times the
tribe prayed with faces turned to the south.) After this
has been done, the bridegroom is carried bodily into the
half of the hut reserved for him and his friends, and is
deposited on the angareb.
He is now anointed with water into which have been
poured a few whole grains of dura. He also changes his
garment and decks himself out with women's jewellery
especially bracelets, and a piece of camel dung is
inserted in his amma. The jewellery includes a necklace
of alternate gold and other beads and a broad silver
bracelet and is worn by the bridegroom until the seventh
day when it is given to the bride.
He is now ready for the bride who, in due course,
approaches with all the women in
attendance. She is carried on the back of a strong slave
seven times round the hut and is then brought in and
deposited on the angareb in her half of the hut. She is
anointed in like manner as the bridegroom.
As soon as the bride is anointed the women in their half
of the hut and the men in their half commence singing
and rejoicing. The men, however, soon go out and indulge
in sports and races.
The marriage feast commences and is kept up for seven
days the men entering and leaving their portion of the
hut while the women do the same in theirs. For seven
days and seven nights, the bride and bridegroom are
surrounded, day and night, by their friends. Only once
during that period does the bridegroom enter the bride's
chamber. In the silent watches of the first night, he,
accompanied by a friend, by stealth approaches the couch
of the supposed-to-be-sleeping bride. He strokes her
face and neck and immediately retires again. This
ceremony is performed with the purpose of preventing the
jinn from bearing her way or changing her into another
being.
At the end of the seven days, the male friends of the
bridegroom begin to leave him until by evening only one
is left in attendance.
At night the bridegroom and his friend again enter the
bride's chamber. This is the signal for all the bride's
attendants, except two old women, to rush out of the
hut. The bride tries to follow and must be forcibely
detained by the bridegroom. (She has allowed her finger
nails to grow long so that the scratches she makes on
his wrist may afterwards be shown to his friends.)
If he fails to retain her, so that she escapes to her
companions waiting outside, he is made the laughing
stock of the village.
If he succeeds he throws her upon the ground and in the
presence of the two old women and his friend, he puts
his foot upon her neck and proclaims himself her lord
and master.
The witnesses now leave: the partition is thrown down:
the hut is one.
Before the wife can speak to the husband, he must pay
her father the sum of £ 10 or give him the present of a
camel.
At the end of ten days, the husband is required to leave
his wife. He goes away for the
purpose of earning the £ 10 or of securing a camel, and
quite often does not return for several months.
The purpose of silence seems to vary very much and even
though the bridegroom has
provided the necessary gift, the bride ought not to
speak to her husband for at least six months.
If he does not leave her village she yet may not speak
to him nor may be live continuously in her house and if
he wishes to see her face before the end of six months,
he must remove her veil by force. The period of silence
may be extended to two years if the present is not
forthcoming. The reason given by the people for this
"avoidance" is that if the bride speaks it shows that
she has known the bridegroom previously and this is
considered disgraceful.
G. J. Fleming |