What would the days be like without fathers? Maybe not so bad, according to experts on the Mosuo culture.
Men of the Mosuo, who live around Lugu Lake on the border between Yunnan and Sichuan Provinces, do help to raise kids—just not their own, with whom the men typically have only limited relationships. Instead the men help look after all the children born to their own sisters, aunts, and other women of the family.
The women of the Mosuos villages head the households, make business decisions, and own property, which they pass on to their matrilineal heirs. In the unique Mosuo tradition called the walking marriage, women invite men to visit their rooms at night—and to leave in the morning. Women may also change partners, and carry no social stigma.
“The lack of live-in fathers shouldnt be taken as evidence that the Mosuo dont value family life,” said Lombard, of the Lugu Lake Mosuo Cultural Development Association. “In fact, they value it above all other relationships.”
沒有父親的日子該怎么過?也許沒那么糟糕——研究摩梭文化的專家如是說。
摩梭人生活在云南省和四川省交界處的瀘沽湖一帶,那里的男子事實上在養(yǎng)兒育女方面也確有幫助——但他們所養(yǎng)育的都不是自己的孩子。那些孩子與他們沒什么直接血緣關(guān)系,都是自己的姐妹、姨媽、姑媽及家族內(nèi)其他女人生的孩子。
在摩梭人生活的村子,婦女自主安排并承擔一切生計,她們擁有財產(chǎn)權(quán),并有權(quán)把財產(chǎn)傳給母系繼承人。當?shù)赜幸粋€十分獨特的走婚習俗,也就是到了晚上,女子可以把男子請到家里來過夜,第二天一早,男子便可離開。女子可以更換伴侶,完全不會背負不好的社會名聲。
瀘沽湖摩梭文化發(fā)展協(xié)會的拉姆巴德說:“生活中缺少父親,并不能因此說明摩梭人就不重視家庭生活。相反,他們會把家庭關(guān)系看得高于其他一切關(guān)系?!?/p>