SIAYA, Kenya — Rebecca Anyango stood outside the house she has called home for 26 years, wondering how long it will remain hers.
As a widow, she's been threatened with eviction for years by her late husband's family, who claim she has no inheritance rights. This year they filed a lawsuit, and the 70-year-old Anyango has no legal representation.
She pointed out where her husband is buried, a few steps from the door.
''Where do I take the grave?" she asked softly.
Anyango is among thousands of widows in western Kenya who face losing everything after their husbands die. They are often in rural areas and with little education, unaware of their rights.
Violating Kenya's constitution
In the Luo, Luhya, and Kisii ethnic groups, widowhood can come with certain cultural expectations that can be considered illegal. One is ''sexual cleansing,'' in which a widow is made to have sex with another man, often a brother of her late husband, in the belief that the ''dark cloud'' of widowhood will lift.
Another is ''wife inheritance,'' in which a widow is taken in as a wife by her late husband's brother.