Following his pleasant discovery
earlier in the day, Hueze Huesu, in his 50s, couldn’t wait to get home later
that night. He felt like a school boy preparing for a first date. He was
excited about exploring the world of séx with a ‘rubber.’
“Nobody had told me about condóms until I heard from some
people that it prevents pregnancy and séxually transmitted diseases,” he said.
However, his excitement was deflated when he tried to explore…
He wanted to enjoy his new discovery
with one of his wives t night. He said, “For the first time, I tried to use it
when I wanted to sleep with my wife but she bluntly refused. She said she was
not a prostitute and queried why I wanted to use a condóm when we have been
married for years and never used one.”
Since then, Huese, who has 10
children, has never tried to use a condóm with any of his two wives. “I have
never believed in the use of condóms anyway. This has not stopped me from
having séx regularly. The woman knows the sign when the man is about to release
or reach climax. So she has already even enjoyed it more than the man before he
withdraws,” noted Huese animatedly.
The use of condóms is strange to men
in Makoko, a densely populated slum town in Lagos where majority live in wooden
shacks built on water.
Like Huese, many Egun people in
Makoko, as well as Oko-Agbon and Ago-Egun communities in Yaba Local Council
Development Area, Lagos, do not like using condóms due to their long held traditional
belief in the old practice of coitus interruptus, also known as the withdrawal
or pull-out method during séxual intercourse.
For centuries, this has been used as
a method of birth control worldwide.
The history is not lost on the Egun
people whose forefathers migrated from neighbouring Francophone West African
countries like Togo and Benin Republic, as well as from Badagry, Lagos. This
age old practice has been transferred to the current generation, where most of
the people speak their local Egun dialect and sometimes French. Their major
occupations are fishing and farming. Only a few understand English and the
residents, whose maj live in wooden shacks built on murky waters oozing with an
unpleasant odour.
“The use of condóm means nothing for
us here as Egun people. We don’t like using condóms because we know ourselves,
both women and men; we don’t go outside or sleep around. It’s those people who
go outside sleeping with different people that contact such diseases like HIV,”
said Lowato Luke, one of the traditional chiefs in the area.
Luke, who has two wives and 12
children, gleefully boasted that he had mastered the withdrawal method and
understands his wives’ ovulation cycles. “I know the particular times to have
séx with my wives, even if they are breastfeeding and I want to have séx with
them, I know how to do it to prevent another pregnancy,” he said. Like Huese,
he also claimed that his wives enjoy the séx more than he does. “But if you use
condóm, it won’t be that enjoyable. I have never used a condóm,” he noted.
It is the same case with Kirianko
Goi, in his 40s. “I don’t believe in the use of condóm because I never heard
that from my father. It’s not for me to say whether I will advise my children
to use condóm or not. If the young boys and girls want to have séx, they won’t
tell you. This generation is clearly different from that of my father and mine.
But if I’m in a position to do so, I will advise them, it is my duty to advise
them,” he said.
Goi’s nephews, two young men in
their 20s, one married and the other unmarried, giggled intermittently during
their uncle’s brief condóm talk. But they declined comments when asked if they
use condóms during séx.
Many of the men who spoke to our
correspondent in the community expressed their aversion to the use of condóms
during séxual intercourse and were insistent that their women enjoyed it that
way.
Twenty-five-year-old Bernadette
Sato, who has two children, agreed. She does not like condóm. “We don’t like
using condóm. But if we don’t want to get pregnant, we know how to do it by
ourselves; it pays us more that way, because we don’t like using condóm. I was
told in a hospital in Cotonou, Benin Republic, where I gave birth to my first
child, that people who don’t want to get pregnant can use condóm. Sometimes, I
use a family planning drug before and after séx with my husband to prevent
pregnancy,” she said, noting that many of her friends also don’t like condóms,
while some claimed it could bring about disease. “I don’t know the type of
disease, but I just don’t like condóm during séx,” she added.
Pipi Olorunwa, who has been married
for 12 years and has six children, gave an insight into the female perspective.
She said: “Although there is no official report that says condóm is bad;
personally, I don’t like it because God did not create it. Those who created it
did so because of the level of immorality in the world today so that they can
enjoy themselves. There are several methods to avoid pregnancy. A couple can
have séx without the wife conceiving.
“I also don’t like the chemical and
odour from condóm because I believe the chemicals used in preserving the condóm
could cause problems and is harmful to the body. Although I didn’t get the
information from a medical expert, but everybody does according to their
belief. I don’t use any drug either to prevent pregnancy. I just do it the
natural way with my husband.”
“We don’t use need it or any other
contraceptive because we understand how to do child spacing,’’ noted the head
of the traditional chiefs in the area, 55-year-old Mr. Francis Agoyon Alashe.
When probed further, he gave a timeline of the spacing among some of his 14
children as proof. It showed a two or three-year gap among them. “My children
are well spaced. Some of them, including the twins, were born in 1984, 1986 and
1989. I stopped having children in 2003,” he explained, adding that he still
had séx with his wives during those period without childbirth because he had
‘planned it carefully with the withdrawal method.’
“Of course, the woman enjoys it.
It’s a matter of agreement between the man and the woman. We don’t like using
condóms as such because we want flesh to meet flesh. If a man is too anxious
during séx, he will release on time, but if he can control his excitement, he
can take longer minutes,” he explained.
According to Agoyon, the use of
condóms could even have ‘negative effects.’ “We believe using condóm could
bring disease on its own. This could happen when the sperm goes back into the
manhood. We call it ‘foon’. Then, to urinate will be very difficult,” he said
However, a medical doctor, Dr.
Kareem Jamiu, punctured holes in Agoyon’s statement. “That’s not true. It’s not
medically possible. But there is what is called ‘retrograde ejaculation’, where
the sperm goes backwards to the bladder instead of forward. Normally, when a
man wants to release, the bladder neck closes so that the sperm can easily flow
forward. But if the bladder neck muscles are weak or relaxed, then it means
there is a problem. Some causes of retrograde ejaculations are complications
from diabetes, a malfunctioning bladder sphincter, as well as some STDs. But in
a normal male, the bladder neck is normally so tight and so the sperm cannot go
back,” explained Jamiu, who once worked with the Doctors Without Borders/Médecins
Sans Frontières during their intervention programme in Makoko, Oddo and Badia
communities in Lagos State.
The MSF team, comprised foreign
doctors supported by Nigerian medical staff, worked in these areas for over two
years and established a health centre, until they left in 2012.
Despite the lack of information,
knowledge, and awareness about the consequences of unprotected séx, there is a
general low rate of STDs and HIV/AIDS in the Makoko communities, noted Jamiu,
who confirmed to our correspondent that the people in the communities really
don’t like using condóms.
He said: “We tried talking with them
but it was difficult getting the message across to them. When you tell them
about it, they just laugh about it and say they will try.
“From our experience with them,
their way of preventing pregnancy is coitus interruptus. Most of the males that
had STDs patronised traditional healers, while the females sometime came for
treatment, although the rate of STDs or HIV/AIDS was not as widespread as
feared. I don’t think there was any difference between the rates in Makoko when
compared with the general population or with people who live in different
settings. Sometimes, there were 11 cases of HIV in a month, sometimes 12. The
community also recorded low figures in malaria and cholera cases,” he
explained.
“We have special herbs to cure STDs
like gonorrhoea and other types of diseases,” said Huese. “It is an
Egunsecret,” Agoyon replied when probed about it.
This surprising trend may be due to
what is medically termed ‘herd immunity’, Jamiu noted. “When a group of people
are exposed to something too frequently, they tend to develop a general
immunity to it,” he explained.
According to Vaccines Today, an
online publication, “Herd immunity is a form of immunity that occurs when the
vaccination of a significant portion of a population (or herd) provides a
measure of protection for individuals who have not developed immunity.”
“I think that’s what happened in
Makoko. The rates of diseases were not really as bad as envisaged, Jamiu said.
Another medical doctor who worked
with MSF, Dr. Valentina Edoro, echoed Jamiu’s words. “There were isolated cases
of STDS, but not high. The number was not something that needed any special
intervention. When the women came for family planning; we found out that they
don’t discuss it with their husband. We needed to bring the men on board during
discussions on family planning, but it came about much later when we were about
rounding off the project,” she said. Edoro added that many of the men in Makoko
said they didn’t enjoy séx with condóms because they believed it decreased the
pleasure during séx.
However, she pointed out that the
withdrawal method may not necessarily be effective in preventing pregnancies
and STDs. “This is because the pre-ejaculation fluid from a man’s man-hood may
contain sperm, which means that the man may still has enough sperm to make a
woman pregnant,” she said, noting that the women were less conservative about
family planning than the men.
“Surprisingly we also discovered
that their children were healthy and they breastfed for longer time,
malnutrition was not a problem. Yes, they had a lot of chest infections because
of their environment and they smoke. But they were healthy, despite their environment.
I was also surprised about the low rate of STDs because they don’t protect
themselves with condóms. They don’t marry outside the community, I don’t know
if that is a factor,” she noted.
Conservatism, illiteracy, lack of
awareness, traditional beliefs, environmental factors, high risk séxual
behaviour and poverty may be some reasons for the widespread practice of unsafe
séx among people in the community. There is also a high rate of teenage
pregnancy there.
Their claims asides, SUNDAY PUNCH
gathered from some of the residents that, despite their marital status, a few
of them still had séxual affairs outside the community.
“Today, girls are getting pregnant
more and giving birth. Séx is more common in Makoko among the young boys and
girls. They like it. All they know in this settlement is séx. You see young
girls of 13, 14 years, who have had séx. And when they are brought to the
elders, they would claim that they are husband and wife. We deliberated some
cases last Sunday, Monday and Tuesday. We had cases of r*pe in the past but it
is very rare. Nowadays, some of these young girls spend their mothers’ profits
from her trade to get boys to have séx with them,” Agoyon said. Most times, a
traditional marriage ceremony is quickly conducted between these young,
consenting lovers. It doesn’t cost much to have one in Makoko, a traditional
wedding ceremony could cost between N10,000 and N150,000, Agoyon said.
This developing trend may change the
status quo in the community in terms of population growth and rates of STDS.
This is the more reason why, beyond
the changing perspectives, Jamiu said people in communities such as Makoko
needed more enlightenment about the use of contraceptives such as condóms,
considering the social and economic effects such population increase in slums
areas would have on the country.
According to recent World Bank
statistics, Nigeria, with a population of over 160 million where majority live
on less than $2 a day, has the seventh highest birth rate in the world. The
report stated that Nigerian women give birth to an average of six children
within their childbearing years.
“Their educational awareness and
knowledge of contraceptives is very poor in Makoko. I can’t comment on how it
works for them. But if the communities can be provided with standard education,
it will help change their mentality and way of life, because you can’t dislodge
them from there. That’s where they are comfortable to live in. It’s more of a
rudimentary life. They have some brilliant children where during interaction
with them, you know they can be better. Education is what they need,’’ he
noted.
Although the older generation still
holds strongly to the séxual practice of their forefathers, the younger
generation of Egun people seem to be drifting away with the current of modern
times, while in the murky waters surrounding their communities.
Remi Goka, in his 30s, who was
evasive about his marital status, said he used condóms whenever he was with his
girlfriends. Like he put it, he didn’t know if they had other séxual
relationships outside. “But I go for tests regularly. I have many of my friends
who use condóms,” he said.
His friends, whose ages ranged from
18 to 30; Hunkarin, Yomlomnun Monday, Keyebo Richard and Djisou Honsou, who had
his name tattooed on his arm, all agreed. They all use condóms also. Goka
agreed that séx among young people was now a common way of life in the
community.
“Yes, there is a difference between
my generation and the older one because we are more enlightened about the
issues. We have a larger population now. It’s a thing of choice,’’ he noted.
With an increasing population,
especially of women and children, poverty, poor living conditions, lack of
education and basic infrastructure and services, the increasing rate of
unprotected séx in Makoko communities is a worrying trend, especially as the
general dislike for cóndoms hasn’t changed much with the younger generation.
“They live in a kind of cocoon. For
them, it’s a way of life. The men go for fishing; the women go to the market
and come back. From what I have observed, there are no special values being
handed over. So, it goes on like a cycle. The young boys grow up to impregnate
their women and it just goes on and on,” Edoro noted.
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