This project seeks to reduce the practice of “beading” – a traditional practice among the Samburu people of Northern Kenya whereby warriors (Morans) are allowed to have a temporary marital relationship with very young girls (as young as 7 years old) from the same clan to prepare girls for marriage - through community awareness and access to medical and psychological care and education to affected girls in 12 villages in Samburu County, Kenya. Affected girls who come to The Sisters of Mary Immaculate Empowerment Centre (SMIEC) will be referred within an existing network of hospitals and health facilities run by the Sisters of Mary Immaculate. Girls who are sheltered by SMIEC will be provided with formal/vocational education, sexual and reproductive health and rights (SRHR) education, and life skills training. Through SRHR awareness campaigns in Samburu county, the project also creates awareness and education to reduce beading supportive environments and enable re-integration of affected girls into their communities in the long-run.