I thought a break from Smack Downs and catching gayness might be in order so here goes!
I've recently finished watching a BBC series called Tribe, where the presenter goes to stay with a small tribe for a month and tries to live exactly as they do. And it's raised some interesting points.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/tribe/index.shtml
Some of the customs shown in the series seem horrific to me - such as female genital mutilation, ritual whipping and in one tribe, the Suri, the insertion of a clay plate into the lower lip of the females.
Yet when the presenter talked to the tribesfolk about these rituals which are so unacceptable in our culture, the women spoke of their pride in having these things done to them - scarring from whipping is seen as a status symbol, the bigger the lip plate, the better bride etc. There was very much a sense of the rituals being a bonding act and a way to keep the tribe's identity cohesive. There seemed to be no coercion. In fact, in the whipping ritual the women actually bait the men to hit them harder.
On the one hand we see how the West has affected their lifestyle - some tribes have seen their land decimated by the arrival of logging companies, another tribe in S. America lost most of its shamen to Western disease when they were first discovered in the 1970s. In Africa rival tribes now use guns instead of traditional bows and arrows - resulting in more deaths.
On the other hand, many of the children get an education now, more have access to better drinking water and many tribes now use modern technology.
Is it our moral duty to force these people to accept our values and educate them in our way of life or should we allow them to keep with their traditions, regardless of how barbaric they may seem to us?
Some of the tribes want to embrace Western culture, others want to carry on with their own traditions. Should they be allowed to choose?
I've recently finished watching a BBC series called Tribe, where the presenter goes to stay with a small tribe for a month and tries to live exactly as they do. And it's raised some interesting points.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/tribe/index.shtml
Some of the customs shown in the series seem horrific to me - such as female genital mutilation, ritual whipping and in one tribe, the Suri, the insertion of a clay plate into the lower lip of the females.
Yet when the presenter talked to the tribesfolk about these rituals which are so unacceptable in our culture, the women spoke of their pride in having these things done to them - scarring from whipping is seen as a status symbol, the bigger the lip plate, the better bride etc. There was very much a sense of the rituals being a bonding act and a way to keep the tribe's identity cohesive. There seemed to be no coercion. In fact, in the whipping ritual the women actually bait the men to hit them harder.
On the one hand we see how the West has affected their lifestyle - some tribes have seen their land decimated by the arrival of logging companies, another tribe in S. America lost most of its shamen to Western disease when they were first discovered in the 1970s. In Africa rival tribes now use guns instead of traditional bows and arrows - resulting in more deaths.
On the other hand, many of the children get an education now, more have access to better drinking water and many tribes now use modern technology.
Is it our moral duty to force these people to accept our values and educate them in our way of life or should we allow them to keep with their traditions, regardless of how barbaric they may seem to us?
Some of the tribes want to embrace Western culture, others want to carry on with their own traditions. Should they be allowed to choose?