麻豆传媒

Menstrual huts protect Dogon men from cuckoldry

Genetic tests reveal how the traditional religious menstrual seclusion of Dogon women in Mali can boost reproductive success for their menfolk
The old ways are best 鈥 for men, at least
The old ways are best 鈥 for men, at least
(Image: Finbarr O'Reilly/Reuters/Corbis)

ENSURING your partner doesn鈥檛 cheat is a perennial problem. Perhaps one solution is religion.

at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor has spent years studying the Dogon people of Mali, west Africa. Women who practise the traditional Dogon religion, unlike those who are Muslim or Christian, spend five days a month around the time of menstruation in a highly visible 鈥渕enstrual hut鈥.

Strassmann tested paternity in 1700 Dogon father and son pairs and found that those who practised the traditional religion were four times less likely to be raising someone else鈥檚 son than those who practised Christianity ().

The findings suggest that the huts make it easier for husbands to monitor wives close to fertile periods. No differences were observed between the Dogon and the Muslim group, perhaps because women are required to tell their husbands when they menstruate.

Strassmann suggests that these traditions may have developed as a way to boost reproductive success.

Topics: Dogs / Love / Sex