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Somalia: Forbidden Love

ISSUE 256
Front Page
Index
Headlines

Somaliland Government Condemns UN Security Council Resolution

US Says el-Qaida Elements Running Somali Islamic Movement

Hargeysa Judicial Court Acquits ‘Hassan Dahir Aweys’ of Terrorism

''Somalia Remains in Political Stasis Despite Mounting Tensions''

Somalia’s Islamists and Ethiopia Gird for a War

Floods Destroy Villages East Of Berbera

Islamists vow not to strike govt

Somalia: Forbidden Love

Interview With Meles Zenawi

Regional Affairs

MPs back UPDF deployment

Ghana: Plane Cited in Arms Trafficking Scandal

Editorial
Special Report

International News

U.S. condemns Somali Islamists' war ultimatum

With Annan, Africa loses its first UN chief

UK government
'driving Muslims to extremism'

When Democracy Fails

U.S. Executives Tour The Horn Of Africa, Learn Of The Terrorist Threats Ahead

Somalia's ragtag Islamists are here to stay

FEATURES & COMMENTARY

Not Being Had By Al-Itihaad

The Next Horror In Somalia

Somalia: Somalis Must Have the Last Word On Who Leads Them

It's Still About Oil In Iraq

Africa: Power Of Music In Africa

Islamic Caliphate A Dream, Not Reality

Food for thought

Opinions

Islamism As A Political Tool In Somalia

Somalilanders Point Of View In The Debate

President Rayale’s Policy Against Influence Of Islamic Courts

Foreign Intervention Will Unify Somalis And Widen The Conflict

Congratulations To The Vice-President Of Somaliland And The Group Of Ministers Sent To Buroa

African’s New Proxy War-Which Side Is Somaliland On?

The Challenges Facing Somaliland Livestock Traders

How to Perform the Rituals of Hajj and Umrah

How to Perform the Rituals of Hajj and Umrah


Sahal says the Islamist edict persuaded him to go ahead with the wedding

Mogadishu, December 12, 2006 – The family of Sahal Abdi-kafi no longer talk to him following his wedding to his long-time girlfriend Zamzam Ahmed, a member of Somalia's lower caste Yahar community.

Despite his family's strong disapproval, the couple went ahead with their marriage, encouraged by an edict from the Islamist group which has taken control of the capital, Mogadishu, and much of southern Somalia this year after 15 years of lawlessness.

Sahal and Zamzam had been seeing each other secretly for five years but neither ever really believed their romantic dream would end in marriage.

"We were very different - in lifestyle, in thinking, in tastes," said Sahal, who runs a big electronics shop in Mogadishu's main Bakara Market and who comes from a prominent family of merchants.

In contrast, Zamzam's father has died and her mother sells the popular stimulant khat.

"Yet we fell in love, we expected the heavens to fall when my parents would come to know of our affair, we expected the worst and were prepared for the worst," Salal says.

After centuries of deep divisions, cross caste weddings like Sahal and Zamzam's are now becoming more common.

Prejudice

Union of Islamic Courts leader Sheikh Sharif Sheikh Ahmed recently said Somalis should marry good Muslims, whatever caste they were from, in an effort to break down centuries of prejudice.

"Islam recommends choosing your partner according to whether they follow their religion and whether they are of good character but not because of their social level," he said.

Sahal, 35, supports the Islamists and says Mr. Ahmed's speech convinced him to go ahead with the wedding, despite his parents' opposition.

Somalia 's caste system is extremely complicated.

While some members of the lower castes, such as the Yahar, Midgan, Eyle, Boon, say they face constant discrimination, several members have risen to occupy prominent positions in society.

Many members of the lower castes perform jobs such as metal-working, hunting with dogs, shoe-making and hairdressing.

Marriage is the area where traditional prejudices remain strongest, with men who marry lower caste women often ostracized by their families.

Beloved

Sahal knew his family would be upset by the wedding and felt unable to tell them that he and Zamzam had gone ahead and tied the knot.

When he did break the news, his father immediately told him to divorce his new wife and choose another, higher caste, woman.

"My parents promised me they would pay a large amount of money for the cost of my wedding if I married a woman of my caste, but I could not disown my beloved one," he said.

"She is beautiful, polite, obedient to me, pious and God-fearing, so there was no reason not to marry her."

Zamzam says she only knew that she loved Sahal and never thought about their difference in social background.

She said it was beyond her wildest dreams to see herself sharing a life with Sahal.

"Love knows no age, no caste, and no creed. There can be no other explanation why Sahal could have fallen in love with me," she said.

"However, he married me against the wishes of his parents, jeopardizing his relations with his relatives and friends and that of the community he comes from," she added.

"Finally, he was mine and I was his. Sometimes life is indeed like a Bollywood movie," she said, smiling.

Sources: BBC, Dec 12 2006


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