South Africa Young Girl Marries Mother

Lolita 26 years did the unthinkable by marrying her mother Loreto who is 44 years in an intimate ceremony in Capetown. The marriage was kept secret because this union is not acceptable in South Africa
Lolita:”My mum was there for me since I was born. I grew up without having a father and I love my mum so much. She is all I have and I don’t want to stay away from her that’s why I chose to marry her so we can live together.
She’s young and knows how to make me happy in bed”
Mum:”My daughter was ready to leave the house if I refuse to marry her, I love her so much and will do anything to make her happy”
We have heard of a girl who married her own father and a mother who married her eldest daughter after her divorce!. Now, it is a girl who marries her mother because she does not want her to get away from her.
Not too long the world witnessed a Congolese homosexual marriage which was celebrated in Belgium, news has been around the web. Since same-sex marriage begins to spread in Europe, the issue is still largely taboo and the practice rejected in Africa as well as in the majority of the African diaspora living in Europe.
For many Africans, the legalisation of same-sex marriage raises this question: in the name of what scale of values do we find it normal that two people of the same sex can marry when polygamy is condemned?
The only downside to this almost generalised rejection of same-sex marriage among the African community in Europe, the prospect thus offered of obtaining papers for potential candidates for white marriage for all.
T shepo Cameron Modisane and Thoba Calvin, both 27, have been together for over the years. They got married in the small town of KwaDukuza, South Africa, in front of 200 guests.
The wedding included Zulu and Tswana rituals.
The spouses specified that they benefit from the support of their respective families. They also indicated that they would have a civil marriage and start a family with the help of a surrogate mother.
South Africa therefore becomes the first African country to celebrate a traditional same-sex marriage. Civil marriages for people of the same sex have been legal since 2006 in South Africa.




