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New York Times, June 8, 2004
Genital Cutting Shows Signs
of Losing Favor in Africa
BYLINE: MARK LACEY
NAIROBI, Kenya, June 7 - Isnino Shuriye still
remembers the pride she felt years ago when
she leaned over each of her three daughters,
knife in hand, and sliced into their genitals.
Each time, as the blood started to flow, she
quickly dropped the knife and picked up a needle
and thread. Quickly, expertly, she sewed her
daughters' vaginas almost shut.
"I was full of pride," she recalled
recently. "I felt like I was doing the
right thing in the eyes of God. I was preparing
them for marriage by sealing their vaginas."
Now she feels like a butcher, a sinner, a mother
who harmed her own flesh and blood, not to
mention the thousands of other girls she says
she circumcised in the last quarter-century
as part of a traditional rite still common
in Africa.
Slowly, genital cutting is losing favor. Parliaments
are passing laws forbidding the practice, which
causes widespread death and disfigurement.
Girls are fleeing their homes to keep their
vaginas intact. And the women who have been
carrying out the cutting, and who have been
revered by their communities for doing so,
are beginning to lay down their knives.
Ms. Shuriye, an elderly mother of eight who is
known far and wide in northeastern Kenya for
her expertise as a genital cutter, is one of
them.
When local members of Womankind Kenya, a grass-roots
group opposing the practice, visited Ms. Shuriye's
hut outside Garissa two years ago, she chased
them off her property.
This was something her mother had done before
her. She started as an apprentice while still
an adolescent by holding down girls' legs for
her mother to perform the rite, which opponents
call genital mutilation. "I thought my
mother would curse me from the grave if I didn't
carry on the tradition," she said.
There were tangible benefits as well. She had
prestige in her community and earned a good
income, more than her husband did as a camel
herder before he died of tuberculosis.
She said she had no use for those people who
came around denouncing her way of life.
But the opponents were a determined lot. They
knew that Ms. Shuriye was one of the longest-serving
genital cutters around and that she held sway
over the community. If only she could be converted,
they figured, others would certainly follow.
Ms. Shuriye, a frail but feisty grandmother who
wraps her head in colorful scarves, was rather
set in her ways. Again and again she refused
to hear their arguments.
"It was so difficult to change her mind,"
said Sophia Abdi Noor, the founder of Womankind
Kenya, which works with the ethnic Somalis
who live in Kenya's rugged North Eastern Province
and has attracted local supporters throughout
the region. "We knew she was respected,
and we wanted her on our side."
Finally, the anti-cutting advocates tried a different
tack. They showed up with religious leaders.
Ms. Shuriye, a religious Muslim, could not
chase them away. She sat down with some influential
clerics in her community who had come to the
realization that the tradition was harmful,
and not dictated by or consistent with the
teachings of the Koran.
The imams denounced the practice. They told her
that the vagina was a part of the body, just
as important in the eyes of God as an eye,
a finger or a limb. Cutting it, they argued
in their long session outside her home, is
a sin.
They went even further. They told Ms. Shuriye
that her sins required her to compensate the
girls she had maimed. Each of them was due
80 camels, they said. Ms. Shuriye, prosperous
by local standards but not that prosperous,
was shaken.
She sobbed. Then she prayed. Finally she pleaded
with the imams for a way out of her impossible
situation. They said the only way to avoid
paying the compensation was to seek the forgiveness
of each of the girls she had cut.
That is when Ms. Shuriye turned from a cutter
to an active opponent. She began making house
calls on the girls who had gone under her knife.
Many of them were women now. She explained
her conversion and pleaded for their forgiveness.
She cried each time, she said.
Most offered their blessings. A few saw opportunity
in Ms. Shuriye's suffering and demanded the
camels, which she did not have. And Ms. Shuriye
was able to persuade a small number of the
women in her tiny village of Ijara to join
the cause.
Laws are not enough to stop the practice, which
is carried out in at least 28 countries in
Africa and elsewhere in the world.
Kenya banned the cutting of girls several years
ago, but the local newspapers continue to carry
reports of the ceremonies and of young girls
fleeing the knife. Twenty-three of them are
now under the protection of Ken Wafula, an
activist who files civil protection orders
to spare girls in the town of Eldoret.
In Tanzania, where cutting is also illegal, three
young sisters sought refuge in a church after
their father said they would have to undergo
it. One of the priests took the girls to the
police for protection, but the officers turned
them over to their father, who had them cut
the next day, and married soon after.
"This is a deeply rooted culture,"
said Ms. Shuriye, speaking though a translator
in a mixture of Somali and Swahili. "It's
religious. It's very difficult for people to
leave it overnight."
Reflecting on her old life, Ms. Shuriye lamented
the loss of status she had suffered since she
had given up cutting. People in the community
denounce her to her face, she said. Imams who
still endorse genital cutting smear her name
in some mosques.
With Ms. Shuriye's help, Womankind Kenya has
managed to persuade 12 other genital cutters
to denounce the practice. Of those, only about
half are regarded as committed opponents. "Some
of them, we suspect, are doing it in secret,"
said Ms. Abdi Noor, who has yet to persuade
her own mother to give up cutting. "We
hear rumors about them."
But everybody knows where Ms. Shuriye now stands.
She is so vocal that she was recently invited
here to the Kenyan capital for an international
conference for reformed genital cutters organized
by Equality Now, an international women's rights
group based in New York. There were cutters
from Tanzania, Somalia, Mali and Guinea, among
other places Ms. Shuriye had never visited.
In some countries the cutting is limited to the
tip of the clitoris, an effort to reduce sexual
pleasure for women and reduce the likelihood
that they will stray from their husbands. In
the more extreme form that Ms. Shuriye performed,
all of the external genitalia are removed and
the vagina is sewn virtually shut.
At the conference, which ended Monday, Ms. Shuriye
met women like her who also had been persuaded
to give up their knives. She heard of the frustrations
faced in trying to stop such a deeply rooted
practice. She learned how some groups were
training reformed cutters to earn money in
different ways, like sewing or making soap.
Reporters at the conference questioned Ms. Shuriye,
and a documentary film crew sat her down by
the pool of the hotel for a long interview.
"I like being an activist," she said.
Ms. Shuriye said that she had no idea how many
girls she had cut over the course of her lifetime,
but that she was determined to find as many
of them as she can.
"This has got to stop," she said.
<< New York Times -- 6/8/04 >>
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