ARTICLE

FindCenter AddIcon

Samoa's 'third gender' delicately balances sex and religion

By Jonathan Barrett — 2021

Strongly built and wearing a floral dress and false eyelashes - and self-named after American singer Beyonce - Lee Hang can’t help but make an entrance, especially when she arrives for Sunday church in her best dress. Genetically male, Lee Hang is a Samoan fa’afafine, a term that translates as “in the manner of a woman”. Fa’afafine is a “third gender” in Polynesian culture, according to the Samoa Fa’afafine Association, and has been a part of island life for as long as anyone can remember. Most villages have fa’afafine, with an estimated several thousand across Samoa’s islands.

Read on www.reuters.com

FindCenter Post-Image

The Path We Walk as Women

In the commentary from the Fall 2019 special women’s issue of Buddhadharma, Jan Willis reminds us of the powerful role of women in Buddhism, historically and today.

FindCenter AddIcon
FindCenter Post-Image

The Sorrow of an All-Male Lineage

Zen teacher Norman Fischer discovers the life-changing — and society-changing — power of really knowing other people’s pain.

FindCenter AddIcon

EXPLORE TOPIC

Gender Issues in Spiritual Life