Among the Kamba (also Akamba) people of Eastern Kenya, there are women who have never seen their husbands because their husbands are ghosts.
It was a traditional custom for women to marry men who had died years ago among the Kamba people of the Bantu ethnic tribe in Kenya. The purpose of ghost marriages was to preserve the chain of life.
“If a son dies before he has married, the parents arrange for him to be married in absentia; so that the dead man is not cut off from the chain of life which is supreme and most important.
Historians say this type of traditional union in Kikamba was called Kuungamia Isyitwa which literally translates to ‘preserve the name of the dead man’.
Marriage was a must and every adult and normal ‘mukamba’ (male) had to marry as a sign of personal importance.
It is believed that every mukamba wife had a spirit husband whose job was to make sure that she conceived. In the case of ghost marriages, the dead man was the spirit husband to the woman.
According to Dr Paul M. Kyalo, a sociologist at Kenyatta University, it was a traditional custom for women to marry men who had long passed.
“The parents of the dead man looked for a girl, proposed to the girl’s family, and if they accepted, paid the bride’s gifts and took the bride home to her ghost husband.
“The family of the dead son took care of the girl and looked for a genitor for her. The children born of this union assume the dead man’s name,” Kyalo explains.
Some cases were more cunning: “An aunt was sent to seduce a girl on behalf of the dead boy who they want to remember. She had to land a cute woman who would marry a dead man who she has never set an eye on but is made to believe exists.
“The normal procedure of paying dowry is respected and a sperm donor is secretly hired to have children with the woman. The children belong to the dead boy.”
Some say the tradition is no longer practised but there exist widowed wives who were married to dead men.