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Tuesday 28 January 2014

Sex- The Abominable Subject amongst African Parents

                       

Do you ever recall the time when you would be watching a movie with your parents, talking and laughing, then suddenly a sex scene comes on which seems to drag on forever? Then there’s that awkward silence that falls over the room and everyone is trying to find the remote control at once but for some reason it seems as if even the remote control has also gone into hiding, ashamed to be in the presence of such a scene? Too often that happened in my household. Nollywood movies were family bonding sessions, however ever since Nollywood went Hollywood, I ceased watching movies with my parents. It was more for their sake because I didn't want them to feel embarrassed. Sex was the unspoken taboo that nobody dared to mention so watching it was a silent abomination.  It was easier to act like it didn't exist.

However it did and it does exist. We live in a sexually charged generation, in a society where anything sexual is what is at the forefront of everything that sells. Sex is the universal act that triggers a common feeling amongst people whether in the Bandundu region of Congo or in metropolitan cities like London, so why has some of our African parents avoided teaching us this very important thing whilst growing up? Why is it an unspoken rule not to mention sex in a sex crazed world? How do we learn without being taught?

There is an African proverb that says ‘It takes a whole village to raise a child’ but we all know that education first begins at home so if our parents don’t teach us about sex education then ultimately we will learn it elsewhere, whether it leads to our detriment or not depending on how we learned it.  I always say a lesson hard learned should teach a person not to make the same mistake twice, but what do you do when that mistake scars you for life? And who is to blame? Sex education at school was the first time some of us received it, if not the only time.  Some of us in our twenties are still waiting to have that ‘talk’ with our parents. Some will die waiting.


As a Congolese woman I’ve noticed that there is a culture of silence amongst my community with the older generation on grave matters such as sex or domestic violence, in order to preserve cultural survival and continuity. Nobody wants to be the one who appears to be different and be used as the example that other people in the community talk about.   ‘We’re not white, we don’t do things how they do’, I’ve often heard said.  If we were to break the silence and speak out it would almost be like rocking the harmony of the nest so we remain quiet and act like we have no senses. 
As second generation Congolese children growing up in the UK, many of us adopt this culture of silence with our parents so when we need them the most during those crucial transitioning stage in our lives where our curiosity is enticed and we begin to develop sexual desires, we don’t even think to raise this with our parents. They’ve never spoken about this to us or made this subject approachable so it becomes an uncomfortable subject between both parties. However, I believe parents need to ask themselves, are we really preserving cultural identity by keeping quiet about sex before marriage? Young people are having sex outside of marriage regardless and STI’s and teenage pregnancies is rampant in our community so who is to blame for this?


Prevention is better than intervention but refusing to speak to your children about sex will not prevent them from having sex. It might even drive them more to find out about this thing that is so intriguing elsewhere.  In fact, some parents will only know their children have been having sex once they fall pregnant out of wedlock; whilst others still believe their godly sons and daughters who attend church every Sundays, Wednesdays and youth groups on a Friday are still virgins till this day (of course there are some who are).

These are the Africans who mix religious beliefs of no sex before marriage to avoid the conversation with their children in this sexually crazed generation and leave it to the pastor to preach to their children. Too many of us have been cuckooed behind churches so we don’t even have the courage to voice it. It’s deemed wrong, fornication is dealt with harshly and shamed so imagine how the 16 year old girl who’s been sheltered all her life falls pregnant whilst in the youth group at church feels? Like the Devil’s child, that’s how we’re made to believe. The reality is, she’s a sexual being who felt compelled to explore these sexual desires due to her curiosity and had someone spoke to her prior perhaps things might have been different for her. I’m sure some 1st generation adults experimented with the condom when it was first invented, (You mean I can have sex and there’s something that can actually prevent me from getting pregnant??), as we know in African culture back then, getting pregnant outside of wedlock was the ultimate shame.


I remember back when a few girls I knew growing up fell pregnant really young (about 14 and 15)  and were sent back to Africa (no mercy, zero tolerance) at the time I blamed the girls for their stupidity, but growing up I blamed the parents for their lack of educating their daughters. To punish children for having sex without ever talking to them is not the best method of teaching them. This creates an even greater division between parents and their children because when you don’t communicate something for so long, it becomes even harder to get to a point in developing a relationship to raise it. So what is it about our parents that they choose to ignore this important part of our lives? And only feel it’s relevant to speak to their children about it after they get married?

Some of our parents might have spoken about boyfriends/girlfriends but would never even mention sex. Did they choose to ignore this factor or were they hopeful that we would wait until marriage?  I decided to do a Google search to see if I can find any online articles regarding attitudes towards sex amongst the African community and most of the articles I came across led to HIV/AIDS. The scare factor dominates the education factor. Yes diseases exist but how can we explain to our children about diseases if we don’t talk to them about the act of sex?


The question is when is the best time to speak our children about sex? Is it when they start playing mummies and daddies with their dollies? Or perhaps it’s when they hit puberty or maybe it’s when they meet their first boyfriend or girlfriend. The lucky ones might get it the night before their wedding day. I’ve found the best way some parents thought to communicate about sex was easy, not to communicate it at all.  

We need to re-evaluate the way as Africans we address this issue of sex in this generation.  The truth is its happening. No matter how much parents close their ears and shut their eyes, young men and young women will have probably experienced a sexual encounter at some point in their developmental stages. The world as it stands gives us access to so many things easily.
I was in Kinshasa, Congo, last summer 2013 for the first time and was shocked at how much Western influence there was in a lot of things in the capital, which made me realise that Africa is not remaining stagnant with culture but are also progressing with time. Though the authentic taste of culture is still there, there is still a strong sense of the West.

1st generation Africans who moved over from Africa to the UK or other parts of the West, still cling to their mentalities of being back home and what their parents taught them, but what needs to be understood is that they are now giving birth to children who are born into an ever changing culture and society in the West. If second generation children have never lived back home they cannot do things according to how it’s done back home so it’s up to the parents. However communication holds the key to any relationship. In order to have a better relationship and trust, parents need to speak to their children about sex before anybody else does. Parents also need to understand that speaking might not deter them from having sex but it could prevent a lot of unforeseen circumstances. Cultural survival and continuity can still exist if we educate our kids in line with the society we live in.

The drawback, as a friend of mine stated, is the fact an adult must be equipped enough before entering a sex conversation with their child and maybe parenting classes would be a methodology to input these skills, but how many parents would like to attend this type of class?


4 comments:

  1. To one thing you report about the Congolese mentality : " ‘We’re not white, we don’t do things how they do’, I’ve often heard said" .... I would answer :All of this sounds all too familiar to me. My parents were extremely embarrassed about sex, I know the awkward silences in front of the television when a sex scene appears in the middle of the movie, I remember the silent fascination of my father, who then left the room, saying "Oh I don't watch those kinds of things!" ...but he never left before it was finished anyway...... and the rare words I had as a way of education were quotations of church principles like: "the works of the flesh out of wedlock shall not desire" (my translation, in French L'oeuvre de chair hors du marriage point ne desirera) ...

    I have never lived in Africa. I believed, reading what anthropologists interested in traditional cultures write in their books, that African folks were much closer to the realities of this earth, of the body than we, mental westerners, were. And if the Congolese say: We are not white, we don't do things how they do" .... why don't they drop Christianity in the first place? Why don't they remember the African traditions from before colonization? My impression is that what you call the Congolese mentality,Mell, is just a sad remnant of cultural colonialism.

    Now, even Christianity can evolve and keep teaching some rules but without the shame and embarrassment....

    Thank you for sharing.

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    1. Thank you for sharing your feedback Jean-Marc

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  2. This was a definate good read I must say. I'm west African, and pretty much the same rules apply to all of us as Africans, No sex, No talking about sex ect. Speaking from a males point of view, my parents didn't tell me anything about sex, and its almost like they jus wanted me to go out there and find out for myself, ( which I did ). Even times I use to bring my girlfriend home used to be awkward. I was 19 when I first brought a girl home, and even though my parents were well aware of what was going on upstairs, nothing about sex was ever exchanged between my parents and I. Same things go for drugs n alcahol, no parents ever teach us the dangers of these things. Anyways I enjoyed reading Your blog, as the title caught my attention. Thank You Mell Nyoko.

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    1. Thank you for reading and sharing your feedback!

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