Now Reading
29-Year-Old Kenyan Woman, Julian Peter Speaks On Coming To Terms With The Hard Reality She Was Born With No Vagina

29-Year-Old Kenyan Woman, Julian Peter Speaks On Coming To Terms With The Hard Reality She Was Born With No Vagina

A routine question that many women get asked when they sit in  a doctor’s office set another woman on a path that led her to discovering she was born without a womb, cervix or vagina. Twelve years ago, when Kenyan woman, Julian Peter, now 29, was asked by her doctor about her menstruation, it was going to be the beginning of a long walk to a shocking discovery that she was born without a reproductive system like other women.

It’s been many years since her condition was first diagnosed and explained to her, and now she’s just shared her story with the BBC’s Anne Ngugi.

”I was born with a condition called Mayer-Rokitansky-Küster-Hauser syndrome (MRKH), where you have no womb or vagina, and you can also find yourself with just one kidney.

A woman who has MRKH can never get periods.

I don’t have a uterus, so I’ve never had periods. This is the normal that I know, I don’t feel bad about it.

People have different feelings about who I am.

‘They can say whatever they want’
Someone told me that I should go somewhere to be prayed for.”


READ ALSO: Born With 2 Vaginas and 2 Wombs, New Mum, Eleanor Rowe Who Defied The Odds To Welcome Miracle Baby Wants Her Story To Inspire Other Women

”Another person said that because I come from Ukambani [a region that is stereotypically linked to witchcraft] then my grandmother had something to do with this.

They can say whatever they want to but what really matters is how I take it. If I were to listen to them it would start affecting me, and I would start thinking that what they were saying was true.

I discovered I had the syndrome when I was a 17-year-old school student.

I went to hospital as I had problem with my legs, which were swollen. The first thing the doctor asked me was when I last had my period. I had never had one.

They did a scan. The first image indicated that my reproductive tract was closed from the outside.

I went through an operation to open it, which was not successful.

I had another scan that showed I had no uterus or vagina, and that was when I was diagnosed with MRKH.

I cried on the first day and the second day and the third, but then I moved on. I was only 17 and quite small, so my priority was to get back to school.

I was in hospital with my mother, my only parent, and the diagnosis shocked her. I think as a parent there were questions she was bound to ask herself, Essentially she was wondering if she had done something wrong.

‘I didn’t want the operation’
As I had studied biology, I understood what the doctor was saying that first time.

I told her that I didn’t want to go through with an operation at that point as I wanted to go back to school to complete my education.”

Ten yeras after her diagnosis, Julian said she returned to the hospital, and had a successful operation where a vaginal canal was created for her.

In her words;

”Ten years later, I went back to hospital and had a successful operation.

The type of MRKH that I had meant that I had no vagina, no womb and I only have one kidney. My vaginal canal was not there and it had to be created.

My life is normal as MRKH does not interfere with how I want to live. But for some it is emotionally disturbing and people might need to go to a psychologist to accept the condition.

See Also

When you realise the implications of the condition that you have, you have to forget about giving birth to children.

I have had four scans and no ovaries were found, so even retrieving eggs for IVF cannot be done.

You must accept the way you are. But realising that you are not like other women is difficult, you need someone who you can talk to.

I’ve met many people here in Kenya with the condition and we share our experiences. I accepted my condition early on and I have accepted myself, so I’m OK.

Explaining to a partner
I have been in relationships. But I don’t let things go too far before sitting down with them and letting them know about my condition.

If they want to accept it they will accept it. But you know, human beings are just human beings.

A large percentage of the people I have told have gone away. Others accuse me of lying, they think that I am saying it to chase them away.

Right now I’m not in a relationship, but it’s all God’s doing.

When it comes to having sex, I had the surgery to reconstruct the vaginal canal in 2018, so it’s just over a year after and I am not ready to have sex.

Neither am I ready to get married. If we wanted to have children we could adopt.

It took me at least 10 years to decide to share my story with the public.

There are people who do not understand what MRKH is and I want to raise awareness.”

Copyright © 2021 Motherhood In-Style Magazine. All Rights Reserved.