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eridani

(51,907 posts)
Mon Dec 22, 2014, 03:22 AM Dec 2014

The Day I Saw 248 Girls Suffering Genital Mutilation

http://readersupportednews.org/opinion2/277-75/27605-the-day-i-saw-248-girls-suffering-genital-mutilation

In 2006, while in Indonesia and six months pregnant, Abigail Haworth became one of the few journalists ever to see young girls being 'circumcised'. Until now she has been unable to tell this shocking story It's 9.30am on a Sunday, and the mood inside the school building in Bandung, Indonesia, is festive. Mothers in headscarves and bright lipstick chat and eat coconut cakes. Javanese music thumps from an assembly hall. There are 400 people crammed into the primary school's ground floor. It's hot, noisy and chaotic, and almost everyone is smiling.

Twelve-year-old Suminah is not. She looks like she wants to punch somebody. Under her white hijab, which she has yanked down over her brow like a hoodie, her eyes have the livid, bewildered expression of a child who has been wronged by people she trusted. She sits on a plastic chair, swatting away her mother's efforts to placate her with a party cup of milk and a biscuit. Suminah is in severe pain. An hour earlier, her genitals were mutilated with scissors as she lay on a school desk.

During the morning, 248 Indonesian girls undergo the same ordeal. Suminah is the oldest, the youngest is just five months. It is April 2006 and the occasion is a mass ceremony to perform sunat perempuan or "female circumcision" that has been held annually since 1958 by the Bandung-based Yayasan Assalaam, an Islamic foundation that runs a mosque and several schools. The foundation holds the event in the lunar month of the Prophet Muhammad's birthday, and pays parents 80,000 rupiah (£6) and a bag of food for each daughter they bring to be cut.

It is well established that female genital mutilation (FGM) is not required in Muslim law. It is an ancient cultural practice that existed before Islam, Christianity and Judaism. It is also agreed across large swathes of the world that it is barbaric. At the mass ceremony, I ask the foundation's social welfare secretary, Lukman Hakim, why they do it. His answer not only predates the dawn of religion, it predates human evolution: "It is necessary to control women's sexual urges," says Hakim, a stern, bespectacled man in a fez. "They must be chaste to preserve their beauty."
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The Day I Saw 248 Girls Suffering Genital Mutilation (Original Post) eridani Dec 2014 OP
Christianity seems to hate females newfie11 Dec 2014 #1
I guess you didn't read the post.. whathehell Jan 2015 #3
Why I'm grateful for human rights ismnotwasm Dec 2014 #2

whathehell

(29,067 posts)
3. I guess you didn't read the post..
Tue Jan 6, 2015, 07:51 AM
Jan 2015

It says it "predates Islam, Christianity and Judaism". It's now practiced mainly in

countries in which Islam is the dominant religion.

ismnotwasm

(41,984 posts)
2. Why I'm grateful for human rights
Mon Dec 22, 2014, 01:28 PM
Dec 2014

The idea that this practiced needs to defended as "cultural" gets flushed right down the toilet. It's funny how a narrative gets worked not a culture, and then the predominent religion will pick it up.

Look at pro-lifers. Most of them would abhore this practice; yet have no problems putting a woman's life at risk.

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