Sunday, January 20, 2008

Female Circumcision: A Denial of Intrinsic Human Dignity

There is a brutally honest essay in the New York Times Magazine about the dismaying number of young girls in Indonesia whose parents force them to undergo the genital mutilation that goes by the euphemistic term, "female circumcision." It is an awful story of the worst kind of misogyny, and in my view, amounts to slavery. From the story:

When a girl is taken--usually by her mother--to a free circumcision event held each spring in Bandung, Indonesia, she is handed over to a small group of women who, swiftly and yet with apparent affection, cut off a small piece of her genitals. Sponsored by the Assalaam Foundation, an Islamic educational and social-services organization, circumcisions take place in a prayer center or an emptied-out elementary-school classroom where desks are pushed together and covered with sheets and a pillow to serve as makeshift beds. The procedure takes several minutes. There is little blood involved. Afterward, the girl's genital area is swabbed with the antiseptic Betadine. She is then helped back into her underwear and returned to a waiting area, where she's given a small, celebratory gift-- some fruit or a donated piece of clothing--and offered a cup of milk for refreshment. She has now joined a quiet majority in Indonesia, where, according to a 2003 study by the Population Council, an international research group, 96 percent of families surveyed reported that their daughters had undergone some form of circumcision by the time they reached 14.
Don't let a squeamish stomach deter you. Look at what is done to these poor girls squarely and without flinching:

Female circumcision in Indonesia is reported to be less extreme than the kind practiced in other parts of the globe--Africa, particularly. Worldwide, female genital cutting affects up to 140 million women and girls in varying degrees of severity, according to estimates from the World Health Organization. The most common form of female genital cutting, representing about 80 percent of cases around the world, includes the excision of the clitoris and the labia minora. A more extreme version of the practice, known as Pharaonic circumcision or infibulation, accounts for 15 percent of cases globally and involves the removal of all external genitalia and a stitching up of the vaginal opening.
This isn't about not respecting cultural differences. This is about condemning the treatment of female human beings as if they were somehow defective for having normal sexual feelings--which is what mutilating genitalia is all about. The entire world should condemn the practice unequivocally and put pressure on Indonesia and other countries where it occurs to put an end to it.

Some, however, prefer a kinder, gentler approach to opposing the mutilation of girls:

Nonetheless, as Western awareness of female genital cutting has grown, anthropologists, policy makers and health officials have warned against blindly judging those who practice it, saying that progress is best made by working with local leaders and opinion-makers to gradually shift the public discussion of female circumcision from what it'[s believed to bestow upon a girl toward what it takes away. "These mothers believe they are doing something good for their children," Guarenti, a native of Italy, told me. "For our culture that is not easily understandable. To judge them harshly is to isolate them. You cannot make change that way."
Imagine if they'd said that about Apartheid; Mandella would still be in jail. Sometimes terrible injustice has to be confronted squarely. Can anyone say boycott?

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11 Comments:

At January 21, 2008 , Blogger Lydia McGrew said...

It is exceedingly angering to me to see people refusing unilaterally to condemn this and try to eradicate it by law. Consider that a child in Western countries who exhibits a single bruise can catalyze an intrusive child protective services investigation, even if the bruise happened in the course of sports or just running around. But where there are large Somali populations, it can be difficult to get investigations of allegations of this extremely severe form of child abuse. I notice how the more detailed description there is of the Indonesian procedure, with "little blood." The other procedures--which have been done on 97% of adult females in Egypt, I have read--are extremely bloody, take more like twenty minutes, and amount to neither more nor less than extreme torture of an innocent child. And there is bloodshed on the wedding night as well, when the husband may make an incision to consumate the marriage. A kind of insanity has taken over people who can utter multicultural platitudes about such things.

 
At January 21, 2008 , Blogger T E Fine said...

Lydia -

It's like we're being punished for being female! Where are the feminists who scream about how abortion needs to be kept legal here in the US? Why aren't there more of them standing up and yelling about this indignity? I don't see this brought up much at the feminisit rallies they have on campus. US Feminists are too concerned with making sure *they* have it good to think about what's best for girls in other countries.

 
At January 21, 2008 , Blogger Wesley J. Smith said...

Tabs: OF COURSE these poor girls are being punished for being females! And your point about feminism is right on the money. Now THIS is REAL discrimination, nay BIGOTRY, and the silence from certain quarters deafens.

 
At January 21, 2008 , Blogger Nancy Reyes said...

and the last paragraph is"Experts" saying to be non judgemental.

The Indo version is type one and two.
I saw a lot of type 4 when I worked in Liberia, complete removal of the perineum leaving only a small hole open. link

I sent that article to the NYTimes editorial section in protest.

 
At January 22, 2008 , Blogger Viola Larson said...

Thank you for this posting, I have linked to it on my blog www.naminghisgrace.blogspot.com. I think it something we should all be thinking about and protesting.

 
At January 24, 2008 , Blogger caringman said...

Yes, I agree this is very gruesome and inhuman and it denigrates women, but I do not know why people are not talking about men also being circumcised against their will and when they are babies even and there are men in this society in those shallow societies are being mutilated too, nobody is talking about it, I think Bioethics has been infiltrated by rabid feminists nonetheless, if you are saying that you are an objective and want to divulge the truth, I just wish you can talk about men being used in this also. But nobody cares here about men issues or men's health also and the implications of alimony or child payment and women using the technology lets say to used against men. There is some implications of this in Bioethics also. I do not know why such an organization like this do not care about men and boys. The implications on men and boys also in the Bioethis or Transgenics and using men and boys to become machines to fight for USA or Canada or the European countries and to subject them to those very bad transhumanists tactics lets say. IT is not good also, are you all talking about it, no way, it is only a one way street, it is only the women victim here, but men and boys are still bad men or bad boys.
I do not know why. Do you want you men or boys to not have any sexual feelings and being robots or cyborgs or do you want a very compassionate
man of boy in your homes and care for your well being. I really care about women and girls, if they are getting very badly treated by those people, well just give me the guillotine, I will take care of those afflicting those women and girls. This is how I care, I am not a mysoginist, but I really hate misandry also. Which all institutions in the Industrialized
countries are doing, almost all of them are misandrists.
Thank you for hearing my cries.
Take good care and be and stay safe.
God be with you all.
P.S. I am not attacking women here, but just to say that men also are suffering from all this. Instead of talking about one gender we should all come together and share our concerns instead of doing gender politics.

 
At January 24, 2008 , Blogger Wesley J. Smith said...

caringman: I knew a comment like yours would be made, and frankly, it is an inapt comparison. First, circumcision does not interfere with proper sexual function. Second, it offers benefits of cleanliness and is even a protection against diseases such as HIV. Third, it is done to infants who have no memory of the minor surgery.

I think some men fanticize that sex with a foreskin is somehow better than without, and that by having been circumcised they were somehow deprived of something. (AND I DON"T WANT THAT KIND OF DISCUSSION HERE.)

Frankly, I don't think doing it or not doing has a significant moral implication. But in any event, the two "circumcisions" are not comparable. At all.

But thanks for dropping by.

 
At January 28, 2008 , Blogger Jimmy the Dhimmi said...

You say that it is your custom to burn widows. Very well. We also have a custom: when men burn a woman alive, we tie a rope around their necks and we hang them. Build your funeral pyre; beside it, my carpenters will build a gallows. You may follow your custom. And then we will follow ours.

-General Sir Charles James Napier, Commander of British forces in India, 1851.

 
At December 09, 2008 , Blogger Unknown said...

Wesley you clearly have not read modern literature regarding male circumcision.

All the statements you have made have been proven false.. there is no scientific reason to circumcise males.

Firstly, there is no evidence that circumcised males contract HIV easier than uncircumcised, that is propaganda pure and simple.

In fact contrary to your statement it is now accepted that circumcision does impact negatively on male sexual function.

And your point about cleanliness is frankly ridiculous, should we all get our finger nails removed at birth to stop dirt getting under them ( especially seeing as the underneath of finger nails harbor bacteria far worse than you would find under foreskin )? No of course we wouldnt.. because all you do is wash your hands regularly. The same goes for the penis.. normal washing routines are more than adequate without mutilating young children.

I hate that you have made me detract from the very serious point being made about female genital mutilation.. but for you to condemn one and not the other is hypocritical in the extreme, especially as what it comes down to is mutilation plain and simple.

 
At January 09, 2009 , Blogger Unknown said...

This comment has been removed by the author.

 
At February 28, 2009 , Anonymous Anonymous said...

The one that have been in practice by muslim community in Indonesia is called "Hoodectomy", "clitoral unhooding", or "clitorodotomy" (search for it your self. Google is your friends :-)).

 

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