Wait, what's the problem? The tribal history is male dominated, like most cultures, and they are trying to show that women are more than baby machine decorations. They are the ones with the skills that keep the tribe going every day. It's like the men are actors and the women are the stage hands, set designers, script writers, and ticket sellers doing the work.
Historically, the structure of the Navajo society is largely a matrilineal system, in which the family of the women owned livestock, dwellings, planting areas and livestock grazing areas. Once married, a Navajo man would follow a matrilocal residence and live with his bride in her dwelling and near her mother's family. Daughters (or, if necessary, other female relatives) were the ones who received the generational property inheritance.
6 comments:
Yes--a show of judging women and dinner.
I think that is rude. I think that you all have lost your minds. Where do you live? What do you eat, boneless chicken breasts? From the supermarket?
Wait, what's the problem? The tribal history is male dominated, like most cultures, and they are trying to show that women are more than baby machine decorations. They are the ones with the skills that keep the tribe going every day. It's like the men are actors and the women are the stage hands, set designers, script writers, and ticket sellers doing the work.
Historically, the structure of the Navajo society is largely a matrilineal system, in which the family of the women owned livestock, dwellings, planting areas and livestock grazing areas. Once married, a Navajo man would follow a matrilocal residence and live with his bride in her dwelling and near her mother's family. Daughters (or, if necessary, other female relatives) were the ones who received the generational property inheritance.
Wiki
Here in New Zealand, it's man's work, and we don't kill the sheep, just make slow sweet love to it.
Yeah, I’ve heard that. Might be the reason for the low COVID numbers down there…
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