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The Runaway Bride
TIME investigates forced marriage and the torn feelings that it engenders. |
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The Scars of Tradition
Female circumcision is a tradition that many imigrants have not left behind. |
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One Faith Divided
Tradition versus progress. French Muslims cannot agree on the way forward. |
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A Vote of Faith
Can Belgian Muslims find a mainstream political party that accommodates their religious beliefs?
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Heir Apparent
Jean-Marie Le Pen promotes his daughter Marine for the highest office in
his party . |
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No
Entry
Europe cracks down on immigration
[6/24/2002] |
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Right Time
Le Pen may be blocked this time but can the French left deliver
[5/6/2002] |
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Islam In Europe
Young Muslims reconcile religion and modern european lifestyles.
[12/24/2001] |
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E-mail your letter to the editor
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| LIBA
TAYLOR/CORBIS |
| SOMALI SURGEON:
A circumciser displays the tools of her trade |
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| The Scars of
Tradition |
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Genital mutilation remains a rite of passage for girls
throughout much of Africa and Europe
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By CHARLES
P. WALLACE | Copenhagen |
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Posted Sunday, Month XX, 2003; 00:00
GMT
Rahmah Ali Kudar is facing one of the most important decisions
of her life. Her daughter, Huda, is 4 years old, and Kudar
must decide whether to submit her to so-called female circumcision,
an appalling practice to Westerners surgical removal
of the clitoris and labia that remains a rite of passage
for girls throughout much of Africa. Yet Rahmah doesn't live
in Africa; she lives in Copenhagen, where the custom is widespread
enough to have stirred vocal opposition. Female genital mutilation
is specifically against the law in Denmark, Britain, Norway,
Sweden and Switzerland and is outlawed in other European countries,
such as France, by laws on violence against children; but
in March the Danish government introduced legislation making
it a crime to take girls or young women to another country
to be circumcised. Kudar, who is now 32, underwent the procedure
in Somalia when she was 9, and will probably spare Huda the
operation. "I face so many medical problems myself that
I don't want to give the same problems to my daughter,"
she says.
A growing number of the estimated 17,300 Somalis in Denmark
disapprove of female circumcision, but many others still feel
the tug of this tradition; some Somali parents skirted the
law by taking their daughters to Somalia or an Arab state
for the operation. "In Africa it's a very common practice
deeply rooted in tradition," says Amel Fahmy, an expert
on female circumcision at the World Health Organization. "In
some societies it's a rite of passage from childhood. In others
it ensures chastity, while in some societies it's a sign of
cleanliness." The new Danish law provides for six to
10 years in jail for a parent who takes his or her child abroad
for the operation, regardless of whether the procedure is
legal in the third country or not. "It's such a disgusting
assault against girls," says Eva Kjer Hansen, the social-policy
spokeswoman for Denmark's ruling Liberal Party. "It's
simply unacceptable behavior."
A bill introducing a similar law is wending its way through
the British Parliament, where it had a second reading two
months ago. "This is a human-rights issue, it's a woman's
issue and one that very much needs to be addressed,"
says Ann Clwyd, the M.P. for Cynon Valley, Wales, who sponsored
the measure. In France, while statistics are scarce, very
rough estimates have determined that 30,000 women and girls
may have suffered the procedure. A woman of Mauritanian origin
received a three-year suspended sentence in Paris in March
for having her French daughter circumcised in Africa.
The practice is common in 28 African countries, where an
estimated 100 million women are circumcised. The origins of
the tradition are murky; some imbue the ritual with Muslim
religious significance, but Muslim scholars say there is no
religious basis for it. The type of mutilation practiced in
Africa has three levels of severity. The first level involves
removing part of the clitoris. The next level, excision, involves
removal of part or all of the labia minora. The most severe
form, called infibulation, is the removal of the clitoris,
labia minora and part of the labia majora, which are then
sewn shut. Because medical personnel often refuse to perform
the operation, says Amina Kamil Jibrel, a Somali woman who
offers counseling to other Somalis at a municipal office in
Copenhagen, it is usually carried out by a woman lacking medical
training and knowledge of infection. When she was circumcised
at 6, Jibrel says she couldn't move for a week: "You
sit on the floor for seven days and your legs are tied together
with a piece of cloth so you can't move and the wound will
heal."
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