Campaigners clash on female genital mutilation
Doubting critics say the research only
encourages female genital mutilation. But you don’t help women by
telling them they’re ‘mutilated’, the researchers argue.
Sexual pleasure
When Professor Sara Johnsdotter started
studying Somali women living in Sweden, she didn’t think sex would be
one of their favourite topics. After all, they had no clitoris.
They’d all experienced the most severe form of female genital cutting – or mutilation, as some prefer to call it.
But to her surprise she found they had a very positive view of sex. They had lots of sexual pleasure, including orgasms.
Two million girls a year have their genitals cut, most of them in Africa.
There are three types of cutting:
- Type 1: clitoris or hood of clitoris removed
- Type 2: inner labia also removed
- Type 3: vagina also sewn up
Doctors who perform it call it female
circumcision. Campaigners have dubbed it Female Genital Mutilation
(FGM). Others say the term Female Genital Cutting (FGC) is less
stigmatising. FGM/C is the compromise term. Worldwide an estimated 135
million women have been cut.
Clitoris
Her study squares with the findings of
Italian researcher Lucrezia Catania, also presented at the world sexual
health congress, WAS.
After all, the little bump we think of as the clitoris is actually
only the tip, she points out. In fact the clitoris carries on deep
inside the body. So even if the tip is cut off, there’s plenty left for
stimulation.
Soft approach
Egyptian sexology professor Hussein Ghanem is
sceptical. Remember that the clitoris is the female equivalent of the
penis, he says. His answer to men who argue about the effects of female
circumcision: “Let’s cut off your penis and see how well you do!”
Hussein Ghanem says that in his home country around 80 percent of women have experienced what he firmly describes as mutilation.
“I think this soft approach against FGM is the wrong way,” he
complains. “I think we must be very firm and clear that it is harmful.
And that the majority of Egyptian and African women do not experience
orgasm.”
Loss
There’s a problem with this tough line
though, says Sara Johnsdotter. In Sweden she found that some circumcised
women were more negative about sex. They were the ones who were more
integrated into Swedish society, and more aware of campaigns stressing
that genital cutting ruins women’s sex lives.
“You have women saying, ‘I thought I was
normal, I enjoyed sex with my husband, but coming here I realise that
I’ve lost so much,” she says.
Well-meaning
Hussein Ghanem argues that the Swedish and
Italian research is playing right into the hands of people who defend
genital cutting. He’s heard a colleague of his – a member of the
Islamist group the Muslim Brotherhood – arguing that the Italian
findings show the practice isn’t so bad after all. Even though, as he’s
quick to point out, top Muslim clerics say it has no place in Islam. Hussein Ghanem and Sara Johnsdotter each
accuse the other of being well-meaning but unscientific. And of muddling
medicine with politics. Yet there’s one thing they firmly agree on:
they want to see an end to the practice of cutting – or mutilating –
girls’ genitals.
Human rights
“Help the victims, but condemn the practice,” says Hussein Ghanem.
“You have real victims, women who suffer all
their lives,” says Sara Johnsdotter. “But you also have many women who
live very well with it. A respectful treatment would talk to both kinds
of women, with all kinds of experiences.”
“Don’t start by telling people they’re
barbarous and that they torture their own daughters,” she argues. Focus
on “bodily integrity and human rights”. A woman’s right to keep her
genitals in one piece.
-Love Matters
-This is Africa
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