Hmmm, here is what Grandson Soyemi said about Tiwas’
comments when she talked about giving free access to her estranged husband to
see their son, Do you agree with Mr Grandson? I am not Yoruba so I don’t know
what to say.
Written by
Grandson Soyemi.
Tiwa Salvage
says she will always allow her estranged husband to have access to their son.
As a Yoruba woman, she is totally in the wrong here. This is more so because
the Yoruba people have three phases of marriage: the Introduction, the
Engagement and the Registry, Church or Mosque Ceremony.
The most
significant of the three stages is the engagement proper which is often conducted
under the Yoruba Customary Marriage Act.
The Act
states that the children of the union between a husband and a wife belong to
the father and if the father dies, the children belong to his immediate family.
Tiwa’s husband has all the rights over their child, according to the Yoruba
culture and tradition, which are laws in Yoruba land.
However,
this tradition is not the same as those of the White in America or the English
from the United Kingdom, where more often than not it is the wife who has the custody
of the children. In Yorubaland, it is the father who has the custody. Tiwa,
therefore has no right whatsoever over the child of her union with the husband.
She is in Lagos, Yorubaland and not in New York or London.
I have done
this post to educate the gullible Yoruba Youth who may have watched Tiwa’s
video. On reflection, I am, however disturbed on the mores and mishaps that
increasingly afflict love and marriage among young Yorubas.
Our society
expects us all to get married. With only rare exceptions, we all do just that.
Getting married is a rather complicated business.
It involves
mastering certain complex hustling and courtship games, the rituals and the
ceremonies that celebrate the act of marriage, and finally the difficult
requirements of domestic life with a husband or wife.
It is an
enormously elaborate round of activities, much more so than finding a job, and
yet while many resolutely remain unemployed, few remain unmarried.
Now all this
would not be particularly remarkable if there were no question about the
advantages, the joys, and the rewards of married life, but most Yoruba, even
young Yoruba, know or have heard that marriage is a hazardous affair.
Of course, for all the increase in divorce, there are still young marriages that work, unions made by young men and women intelligent or fortunate enough to find the kind of mates they want, who know that they want children and how to love them when they come, or who find the artful blend between giving and receiving.
It is not
these marriages that concern us here, and that is not the trend in Yoruba
today. We are concerned with the increasing number of others who, with mixed
intentions and varied illusions, grope or fling themselves into marital
disaster.
They talk
solemnly and sincerely about working to make their marriage succeed, but they
are very aware of the countless marriages they have seen fail.
But young
people in particular do not seem to be able to relate the awesome divorce
statistics to the probability of failure of their own marriage. And they rush
into it, in increasing numbers, without any clear idea of the reality that
underlies the myth.
I can only
hope Tiwa and her husband find the grace to work things out on their own.
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