Nice Nailantei Leng'ete Explained

Nice Nailantei Leng'ete
Birth Place:Kimana, Kenya
Nationality:Kenyan
Education:Kenya Methodist University[1]
Occupation:Human rights activist
Known For:Advocacy against female genital mutilation (FGM)
Awards:Time magazine 100 world's most influential people
Notable Works:Nice Place Foundation
Pronunciation:nɑɪs ‘nɑɪləntɛ lɛ̃ŋ’ɛtɛ

Nice Nailantei Leng'ete (born 1991) is a Kenyan human rights activist, advocating for alternative rite of passage (ARP) for girls in Africa and campaigning to stop female genital mutilation (FGM). In her work with Amref Health Africa, Leng'ete has saved an estimated 17,000 girls from undergoing genital mutilation and for many, childhood marriages. She was named by Time magazine in 2018 as one of the 100 most influential people in the world.

Early life and education

Nice Nailantei Leng'ete was born in 1991 in the village of Kimana in Maasai country, Kenya. She was orphaned when both her parents died in 1997 and 1998. She spent her early years moving among many different homes in her village. When she was eight years old, she was sent away to a boarding-school. It was there she discovered that "the cut", a rite of passage for girls transitioning to womanhood in her Maasai culture, was not required.[2]

At the age of eight, when her time came to undergo "the cut", Leng'ete decided to run away, encouraging her sister to come with her. They ran through the bush to their aunt's house —70 kilometers away, to avoid being seen on the road. Leng'ete's uncle and men from the village soon discovered where she and her sister were hiding. When they came for the girls, they beat and threatened them. The next year, when village girls were being prepared for the rite of passage, Leng'ete' ran away again, but was unable to persuade her sister to join her.

When she was brought back to the village, Leng'ete made an appeal to her grandfather. She told him that she would run away forever and live on the streets rather than endure being "cut". Her grandfather relented, and agreed to let her to forego the traditional ritual, and also allowed her to return to school. Leng'ete was ostracized by the village as being a bad example and someone who shamed her family and community.

Early activism

Leng’ete was the first girl in her village to go to high school. She began to be seen in her village as an inspiration to young girls and women. Later, she would hide young girls who asked for her help in avoiding "being cut", an action that made her an outcast in her community. Leng'ete continued to advocate for the girls and encouraged the villagers to discuss the sensitive and important issue.[3] In the Maasai culture, women are not allowed to address village elders, but when Leng’ete attended a sexual health class sponsored by Amref Health Africa, she asked the village leaders to let her share with the community what she had learned. The village elders allowed her to speak only to the younger men of the village, but none of the men were interested in listening to her. "No girl had been courageous enough before to challenge the status quo, to challenge men," according to Douglas Meritei, one of those men. Len'ete would not give up, and kept trying to speak to the younger men for the next two years. Eventually, the elders of the village told the young men to sit with her, but only three of those men would speak to her."Gradually, more of the younger men came to talk with her, she said, and gradually the topics expanded — from H.I.V. prevention to teenage pregnancy and its health complications, to early marriage, to school attrition and, finally, to the cut."

After nearly four years of conversations, the village elders decided to abandon cutting. "She had persuaded the men, and with them the village, that everyone would be healthier and wealthier if girls stayed in school, married later and gave birth without the complications cutting can create." Because of her advocacy, Leng'ete was the first woman in her village to be given the Black Walking Stick, which signifies leadership, respect and power within her community.

Activism career

In 2013, Leng'ete spoke at the Clinton Global Initiative (CGI) in New York about her campaign to stop FGM. She also gave a TEDx Talk in the Netherlands on sexual and reproductive health rights.

In 2014, the Maasai elders, who rule over 1.5 million people, declared the end of the practice of FGM. Because of Leng'ete's work, girls become women in the Maasai community without undergoing FGM, continue their education, instead of marrying early and bearing children when most are still children themselves. Since 2014, Leng'ete has been working as a project officer under the Amref Health Africa in Kenya Alternative Rite of Passage project (ARP). She manages an advocacy programme that travels from village to village to convince elders and community leaders to allow other young girls to forgo "the cut" and attend school.[4] "Leng'ete's work as a project officer with Amref Health Africa has saved an estimated 15,000 girls from FGM, as well as from childhood marriage."[5]

Leng’ete continues work with Amref Health Africa to educate young people about sexual and reproductive health and rights. "Even though Kenya outlawed the cut in 2011 and the Maasai people abandoned it in 2014, the law is difficult to enforce, especially in rural communities. Leng’ete’s work is critical to spreading the message about FGM. “We need to reach more political leaders, more elders, more women, more men, more boys, more girls, more circumcisers,” Leng’ete says. “We need to reach more people through community dialogue and working together.”

Leng'ete has been the recipient of numerous awards since 2015 for the work she is doing to stop FGM. Time Magazine named her one of the 100 Most Influential People of 2018 for her work with Maasai communities in Kenya to end the practice of FGM.[6] [7] [8]

Awards and recognition

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Nice Nailantei Leng'ete . Women Deliver.org . 30 August 2018.
  2. Web site: Capo Chici . Sandro . Nice Nailantei Leng'ete, champion of the fight against excision . Nofi . 31 October 2016. 28 August 2018 . 3 July 2018 . https://web.archive.org/web/20180703162915/https://nofi.fr/2016/10/nice-nailantei-lengete-championne-de-lutte-contre-lexcision/31706 . dead .
  3. Web site: Sheppard . Elena . 25 July 2018. This 27-year-old Maasai woman helped 15,000 girls escape 'the cut' . Yahoo Lifestyle . 30 August 2018.
  4. Web site: Maza . Christina . Meet the woman saving thousands of girls from female genital mutilation . . 12 May 2018 . 28 August 2018.
  5. Dukureh . Jaha . Nice Nailantei Leng'ete . Time . 2018. 28 August 2018.
  6. Web site: Bakkila . Blake . Nice Nailantei Leng'ete Escaped Genital Mutilation as a Girl—Now Her Mission Is to End the Ritual . Health . 25 April 2018. 28 August 2018.
  7. News: She Ran From the Cut, and Helped Thousands of Other Girls Escape, Too. The New York Times. Moore. Gina. 13 January 2018. 13 April 2018.
  8. Web site: Khamala . Caroline . Amref Health Africa Staff Named to TIME 100 . Amref Health Africa . 19 April 2018 . 29 August 2018.
  9. Web site: Anti-Fgm Ambassador Selected for the 2016 YALI training . Amref Health Africa. 23 February 2017 . 30 August 2018.
  10. Web site: Larry Madowo, Natalie Tewa, Njugush celebrated in the Most Influential Young Kenyans list . The Sauce. Murugi . Gichovi. 4 February 2019.
  11. Web site: Nice Nailantei Leng'ete - Laureate Freedom from Want Award 2022 . Roosevelt Four Freedoms . Roosevelt Foundation. 13 June 2023.