15 Rites of Passage From Around the World

While a rite of passage can be just about anything, some have stood the test of time long enough to be known, expected, and respected. Some mark the day when a boy ends his childhood and becomes a man, others may mark occasions of career milestones, religious standings, or social class hierarchies. While these rites will vary throughout the world, one thing is certain – rites of passage are something we all inevitably go through. These are 15 of such rites that carry on traditions today.

Maasai Lion Hunt

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The Maasai are a peaceful people in Kenya and Tanzania, but they still need a way to keep their men on their toes. Instead of using humans as targets for their warriors to hone their skills, they prefer to target lions- and not the sickly, young or female ones. The Maasai Warriors only hunt capable, large, male lions that have a pretty decent chance of winning, and they do it with a spear. Considering the fact that guys on safari with huge rifles still manage to get killed by lions every year, those Maasai Warriors have some guts.

Bar Mitzvah

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Jewish law says that a boy should be capable of handling his life as a man at the age of 13. We overlook the importance of this nowadays, but the implications are huge. Once a boy has his Bar Mitzvah, he’s responsible for his own actions, and able to do adult things like get married. We may still largely view teenagers as kids here, but in the parts of Israel where the old laws still have clout, people pay much more attention to this sort of thing.

High School Graduation

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High schoolers across America both dread and covet this day. All at once, they’re free from the horrors of high school, and suddenly expected to actually do something. While every study yields a slightly different result, less than half of all Americans both go to college and actually finish a four-year degree. On top of that, “college student” has all but become a career, with the average time it takes for that four-year degree being something like six to eight years. That means high school diplomas are still the mainstay of our educational milestones. Since graduation happens so close to legal age of 18, most of America views it as the crossing point into adulthood.

Poy Sang Long

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The look on this kid’s face is priceless. Young Burmese boys, usually around ten years old, go through this three-day long Buddhist ceremony. They spend most of those three days riding around on the shoulders of grown men, dressed up in full swagger to imitate Buddha, the idea being that he himself was a prince before giving it all up to walk the path of enlightenment. On the third day it all comes to a head when the young boys are ordained and entered into the priesthood, and spend at least one week with the monks. Afterwards, some go home to their families and some stay to become monks themselves. Bet you thought you had it bad when your family dressed you up as a kid.

Walkabout

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The Aborigines of Australia take becoming a man pretty seriously. So seriously, in fact, that they send their adolescent boys out into the wild to see if they can survive in the Austrailan Outback, unassisted for six months.  During this time they are forced to survive on their own, and spend a great deal of time thinking about all the great big stuff men think about when they’re wandering around a desert. When they come back to their people, they don’t get a merit badge, they get respect. Boy scouts have nothing on these guys.

Seijin Shiki

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The Japanese celebrate their Coming of Age day as a national event on the second Monday of January. Once the ceremony itself is over, the event turns into one big annual party for all 19-20 year-olds (whose birthday fell before April 1st of that year). When the boys-turned-men aren’t too busy ogling all the girls in their dress-kimonos and party outfits, they’re getting ridiculous on their own since afterward they’ll be considered adults (and finally have to act like them).

Vision Quest

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Native Americans may be shrinking in numbers, but there are many who do their best to pass on the old traditions. Vision Quests, much like the Aboriginal Walkabout, involve a period of solitude and introspection out in the wilderness. Unlike most rites of passage though, a young boy who leaves on a Vision Quest won’t come back a full-fledged man, but instead with a sense of purpose for his continuing journey toward becoming a man. The quest lasts only a few days, and usually involves an Animal Spirit, subject to much pop-culture ridicule and called a purely hallucinogenic experience.

Russefeiring

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While American high school graduations tend to be over in a single afternoon, Norway does things a bit differently. A ridiculous (and awesome) mash-up of universally color-coded outfits (Star Trek anyone?) and Spring Break-meets -Mardi Gras, Russefeiring has all of Norway knee-deep in shenanigans for 17 straight days. Along with the constant partying, challenges earn the “Russ” merit tokens. These aren’t boring either, since they consist of tasks like crawling through grocery stores and barking like a dog while biting ankles, and having sex with a different chick on each of the 17 days of the celebration. Since there is always proof required, well, you get the idea.

Hunter’s First Kill

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Men have taught their sons how to hunt since prehistoric times, and pieces of that legacy still live today. A hunter’s first kill is a pretty big occasion, usually marked by ritual. While some families have their own rituals, passed down a few generations, most follow the universal theme of “first blood.” The new hunter will mark himself with the blood of his prey, usually painting his face with it, and some even go as far as to drink the blood. Once this happens, the young man can call himself a hunter.

‘Redneck’ Coming of Age

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While wholly unofficial, the Redneck Coming of Age is a widely known and much joked-about tradition. Fathers are often eager for their sons to “grow up” and be men. In this “ritual” a dad will go out and buy his son a hooker for his 18th birthday. The idea behind it may be trashy, but looking back throughout history, it’s really not all that weird, and can you really say that your dad gave you a present you enjoyed so much when you were a kid?

Rumspringa

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No, this is not just a fun word to name your bad college Ska band. Rumspringa is the Pennsylvania German word for “running around,” and that’s exactly what the Amish who go through it do. Basically, young Amish men aren’t forced to stay Amish, at around 16 they can leave the community and sew their wild oats. If, in the end, they decide to go back and be baptized in the Amish way, then they’re welcomed back with open arms and a clean record. The obvious catch being that it’s the only time they’ll be able to abandon their strict rules for living and still keep their status.

Circumcision

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Men who undergo circumcision as babies usually don’t ever stop to consider just how lucky they were to have it done then as opposed to later on in life. While many cultures go through circumcision, not all of them do it to newborns. In many African countries, males go through the dangerous procedure as young adults, as a final step to becoming a man and becoming eligible for marriage. Entire villages get involved annually as all the males of the right age get circumcised, and then are  isolated outside town to heal. The “surgery” is rarely done by a surgeon, and infection rates are staggering. In this quest to become men, many boys end up dying, alone in a tent.

Crossing the Equator

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Navies from around the world hold a special ship-wide “ceremony” for all the sailors on-board who cross the Equator the first time. The “Crossing the Line” ceremony, as it’s called, crosses every line it can. These floating debaucheries can get so out of hand, that the legality is sketchy at best, and just about every rule goes out the window. It’s tradition for these guys to dress up in drag and eat things that should not be seen, much less eaten. While it may have been tamed some in the last few years as more and more women are aboard naval vessels these days, the party still goes on, turning “pollywogs” into “shellbacks” one shipload at a time.

Fraternity Pledging

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Becoming a much-loathed Fratboy isn’t something just anybody off the street can do, it takes hard work and dedication. For generations, young men have gone away to college, but could not fully realize their potential without going through some of the most humiliating punishments that a young man can imaginatively inflict upon other young men. Once they make it through these (now largely illegal) trials of brotherhood, the worthless pledge becomes a valued member of the fraternal order. A former pledge won’t likely forget what he’s gone through, but not for lack of trying.

Marriage

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In all the world, there may not be nearly as terrifying a rite of passage into manhood as that of Marriage. No other moment in life is held so universally as a doorway to manhood, regardless of any previous life experience or even age. Once a guy takes this plunge into the ‘Happiest Moment of His Life’, he’s done for. Family members will often try to ply the young man with alcohol and gifts, but nothing can really soothe the pain, that’s what bachelor parties are for.

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20 Responses to 15 Rites of Passage From Around the World

  1. having made a Bat Mitzvah when i was 13, this article was very interesting as i learned about many other rituals. i find the walkabout the most intriguing and wonder how old the men are when they participate in it.

  2. Modern day music festivals are also a sort of rite of passage. Multiple days camping with all the lures of pleasure island and more…

  3. my Father has welcomed me to manhood twice in my life.

    1. killing, skinning, and butchering my first deer (age 14)
    2. signing the paper work for my school loans and collecting my first serious financial burden of about $54,000 (age 18)

    The second one I think is really interesting because in today’s American society I think he kind of has a point… you get thrown face first into responsibility with a few quick licks of an ink pen that will test you in more ways than hunting a deer or removing foreskin will ever do.

  4. Great article Hepburn!

  5. OMGosh dude that Lion picture is amazing!

    RT
    http://www.privacy.cz.tc

  6. Wow. Rumspringa sounds pretty crazy. How come we never heard of this before or saw pictures? Is there a “Amish Go Wild!” series of videos we can buy? One day Jedediah is harvesting crops and the next week he’s doing beer bongs and snorting blow off a hooker’s ass.

  7. Skiing the headwall at Tuckerman Ravine.
    For east coast skiers, if you spend any time with other skiers you’ll hear about this place. It’s a 2+ hr hike, you carry all your own gear, and if you’re really gnar you spend the night and do it again the next morning.

  8. Debt Consolidating says:

    i love all of the pics. thanks so much for making me fall out of my seat laughing

  9. Television Spy says:

    Yikes I wouldn’t say hunting is a rite of passage anymore, a barbaric one in this day and age.

  10. Ya’ gotta’ love Norway. (We might have done something like that here…but we didn’t know what to call it. I think it was just called getting hammered…)

  11. I was doing seriious research for an article I am writing but this was great to stumble upon.
    Check out the cardboard hat on the African…waste not, want not, eh?

  12. Thanks for a fantastic and informative article. I was researching rites of passage for a piece that I am writing and this really helped.

  13. Recently some English families sent their daughter to the celebration for the passage into Adulthood. The girls in this celebration are dressed up as princesses—- they wear the evening dress and go into the ball as the princesses. Everything in the celebration is perfect as the scene in the fairy stories—- princess dances with the prince and then they marry and have a happy life. The reality is more complicated than this.
    These girls are trained from their gestures to they make ups for months just for the preparation of this celebration. And the holder of this celebration said that she just want to restore and promote this tradition, which is very popular in the 19th century—- the rich family sent their daughters to the ball for the passage into Adulthood and seek husbands for them in the ball. The holder said she wanted to restore this tradition, but I think it is out of time. Now the girls have more ways to know boys. In my opinion, the bar or the concert would be a better place for knowing someone. And the dress for the passage into Adulthood should be changed into short dresses, the ornaments should be changed from the jewelry to the rubber wristbands. I think the tradition should change by time, and it proves that this kind of development is the best way to restore and promote the tradition. After all, how many people could afford the charge for that formal celebration for passage into Adulthood? Only the evening dress costs more than ten thousand dollars.
    If the aim for this kind of celebration is not for showing off, but for the charities, then we should know it costs more than it could earn. The expense for this celebration, both the money and the time could be used to help more people. The costs for the dresses could afford the expense of one orphanage in South America or in Africa. Is it really helpful to have such celebration?

  14. this things dope

  15. meghan fucking west says:

    You people are all fucking retarded and I want to have hot sex with your parents ;) yeah bab!

  16. Jeffery turnball says:

    ohhh im totaly down to fuck !!!! i have a fish fetis ! come fuck right now!

  17. Keoni "Chashew" Jaimeson says:

    I love those boys they’re soooooo hot!

  18. whatever

  19. up and J grr grrr grrr

  20. Kokoro Tenshin says:

    This is stupid what a waste of my time