It's Almost Summer: The Cutting Season Is Here | The Odyssey Online
Start writing a post
Politics and Activism

It's Almost Summer: The Cutting Season Is Here

Summer days: They're what childhood memories are made of.

133
It's Almost Summer: The Cutting Season Is Here
Wikispaces: Health Culture and Society

Summer is coming up. Take a moment and think what comes to your mind when I say the word "summer."

The beach? Yes, definitely. A summer job? Possibly. Family reunions? You can't even escape them. A new TV show? Most probably.

If one or all of the things above came to your mind, then you are blessed. You're blessed because summer isn't the same to everyone else. To some girls, it's known as "the cutting season," as terrifying as it sounds.

It's a time of year many young girls in the UK, Africa and the Middle East, where FGM is most prevalent, dread. Summer in Egypt is the season of FGM. Yes, I mean Female Genital Mutilation (It's very common in the UK too, in case you thought ignorance is restricted to the third world only).

Ninety-one percent of Egyptian women have undergone circumcision between the ages of 5 and 14. This brutal process usually takes place in the summer when young girls are out of school, giving them more time to heal before the next school session

This article is talking specifically about FGM in Egypt because Egypt is ranked second worldwide in performing FGM. Another reason is that Egypt is considered one of the most civilized, if not the most civilized, countries in Africa, so you can imagine worse in other countries.

If you're not familiar with FGM (which you probably aren't), here are some facts you should probably know.

According to the World Health Organization website (WHO), in 1995, WHO developed four broad categories for FGM operations.

Type 1

Excision (removal) of the clitoral hood with or without removal of part or all of the clitoris.

Type 2

Removal of the clitoris together with part or all of the labia minora.

Type 3 (infibulation)

Removal of part or all of the external genitalia (clitoris, labia minora and labia majora) and stitching and/or narrowing of the vaginal opening leaving a small hole for urine and menstrual flow.

Type 4 (unclassified)

All other operations on the female genitalia, including:

  • Pricking, piercing, stretching or incision of the clitoris and/or labia
  • Cauterization by burning the clitoris and surrounding tissues
  • Incisions to the vaginal wall
  • Scraping (angurya cuts) or cutting (gishiri cuts) of the vagina and surrounding tissues
  • Introduction of corrosive substances or herbs into the vagina.

Type 1 and Type 2 operations account for 85 percent of all FGM. Type 3 (infibulation) is common in Djibouti, Somalia and Sudan and in parts of Egypt, Ethiopia, Kenya, Mali, Mauritania, Niger, Nigeria and Senegal. The practice is usually carried out by a "cutter" midwife in villages using a razor blade, but in some countries such as Egypt and Indonesia it is carried out in clinics and hospitals.

What I grew up knowing as FGM is Type 3 since this is the most common in Egypt. By now you may be wondering why?

What makes people torture their daughters in this brutal and inhumane way? Why would any parents in the world cause all this psychological and physical harm to their baby girls?

Here are the reasons why FGM is still a social norm in Egypt and other African countries. Not just a social norm, but highly favorable too.

In Egypt, people perform FGM on their daughters to "preserve" the family "honor." Excision of the clitoris is believed to reduce a woman’s sexual pleasure or desire, thus reducing the likelihood that she will become sexually active with anyone other than her husband. It's also a way to ensure that a girl or woman stays "pure" before marriage. These people will go as far as doing anything to make sure their daughters stay virgins before marriage, even if it's cutting a part of their bodies.

Hilary Burrage, a sociologist and writer, talks in her book "Female Mutilation: The truth behind the horrifying global practice of female genital mutilation" (New Holland Publishers, 2016), about the horrible impacts FGM later has on sexual and psychological health. She lists them as follows:

Impacts of FGM on physical health: Immediate (up to 10 days)

  • Severe pain
  • Hemorrhage
  • Shock (sometimes death)
  • Infection of the wound
  • Acute urinary retention (with pain and burning)
  • Urinary track infection
  • Abscesses and ulcers
  • Fever
  • Septicaemia
  • Tetanus
  • Gangrene

Impacts of FGM on physical health: Medium and longer-term (after 10 days)

  • Delay in wound healing due to infection, malnutrition and anemia
  • Anemia (and failure to thrive if malnourished child)
  • Chronic pelvic infection
  • Fibrosis (scarring at site of cutting)
  • Keloids (abnormal growth of scar tissue)
  • Synechia (abnormal fusion of labia)
  • Tissue rotation (abnormal scarring and retraction of anatomical zones)
  • Chronic back and pelvic pain
  • Urinary problems/incontinence/kidney failure
  • Bladder calculus/stone formation
  • Hypersensitivity of entire genital area, including neuroma on the dorsal nerve of the clitoris
  • Dysmenorrhoea/menstrual problems
  • Hematocolpos (accumulation internally of menstrual blood)
  • Pain at sexual intercourse
  • Recto/vaginal fistulae
  • Unwillingness to seek general medical advice, in case FGM becomes evident
  • Hepatitis and other infections (because of poorly healed wounds)

Impacts of FGM on sexual health

  • Spasm/pain during intercourse
  • Anxiety resulting in vaginal dryness
  • Less sexual satisfaction/difficult to reach orgasm
  • Less (reported) sexual desire/lack of arousal
  • Shame or embarrassment about intimacy
  • Greater risk of HIV (because of cuts which bleed)
  • Medical checks (e.g. smear tests) difficult, and may be avoided, so early prognoses of ill health are missed
  • Morbidity due to anal intercourse, where vaginal access is difficult
  • Infertility

FGM is a very broad topic that can't be summed up in an article, but now you know it exists.

Sometimes, it hits me how I am lucky that I was born in an educated, well-off and "liberal" family in the city, because these are the kind of people in Egypt who completely oppose FGM. My parents are the ones who taught me about FGM, how it's brutal and not OK, and how it's absurd the way people justify it under the name of religion because this is what people do when they want to do absurd actions.

If I'm lucky to be from the 9 percent in my country, and you're lucky to be born in a first-world, developed country, we should then be aware that what we may be taking for granted, is a dream for others. A big dream.

P.S. In Cairo, this process can be performed for 30 Egyptian pounds. This is $3. Just saying.

Report this Content
This article has not been reviewed by Odyssey HQ and solely reflects the ideas and opinions of the creator.
ross geller
YouTube

As college students, we are all familiar with the horror show that is course registration week. Whether you are an incoming freshman or selecting classes for your last semester, I am certain that you can relate to how traumatic this can be.

1. When course schedules are released and you have a conflict between two required classes.

Bonus points if it is more than two.

Keep Reading...Show less
Student Life

12 Things I Learned my Freshmen Year of College

When your capability of "adulting" is put to the test

2460
friends

Whether you're commuting or dorming, your first year of college is a huge adjustment. The transition from living with parents to being on my own was an experience I couldn't have even imagined- both a good and a bad thing. Here's a personal archive of a few of the things I learned after going away for the first time.

Keep Reading...Show less
Featured

Economic Benefits of Higher Wages

Nobody deserves to be living in poverty.

301667
Illistrated image of people crowded with banners to support a cause
StableDiffusion

Raising the minimum wage to a livable wage would not only benefit workers and their families, it would also have positive impacts on the economy and society. Studies have shown that by increasing the minimum wage, poverty and inequality can be reduced by enabling workers to meet their basic needs and reducing income disparities.

I come from a low-income family. A family, like many others in the United States, which has lived paycheck to paycheck. My family and other families in my community have been trying to make ends meet by living on the minimum wage. We are proof that it doesn't work.

Keep Reading...Show less
blank paper
Allena Tapia

As an English Major in college, I have a lot of writing and especially creative writing pieces that I work on throughout the semester and sometimes, I'll find it hard to get the motivation to type a few pages and the thought process that goes behind it. These are eleven thoughts that I have as a writer while writing my stories.

Keep Reading...Show less
April Ludgate

Every college student knows and understands the struggle of forcing themselves to continue to care about school. Between the piles of homework, the hours of studying and the painfully long lectures, the desire to dropout is something that is constantly weighing on each and every one of us, but the glimmer of hope at the end of the tunnel helps to keep us motivated. While we are somehow managing to stay enrolled and (semi) alert, that does not mean that our inner-demons aren't telling us otherwise, and who is better to explain inner-demons than the beloved April Ludgate herself? Because of her dark-spirit and lack of filter, April has successfully been able to describe the emotional roller-coaster that is college on at least 13 different occasions and here they are.

Keep Reading...Show less

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

Facebook Comments