Curiosity Issue 13

Page 14

THE KNIFE BETWEEN HER THIGHS

Female genital mutilation is the surgical removal of a girl’s external genitalia for religious or cultural reasons to prevent intercourse and to enhance status. This extreme form of gender violence is increasing in South Africa. SHAUN SMILLIE

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Warning: content might be potentially disturbing.

r Marise Subrayan could do nothing to save the newborn baby at the Rahima Moosa Mother and Child Hospital in Coronationville, Johannesburg. The baby she was helping to deliver had become trapped in vaginal scar tissue and suffocated to death. The mother’s family had refused a caesarean section, citing religious reasons. “And it is not just babies, I have had a woman die on the table,” says Subrayan. That woman bled to death. The killer that day is under-researched and hides behind religious dogma. It is Female Genital Mutilation (FGM) and South African researchers and medical practitioners are increasingly seeing it in its most extreme forms. Subrayan saw FGM victims during her residency at the Hospital, and her experiences prompted her to examine this form of abuse in a Master of Medicine dissertation through the Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology at Wits in 2019. “What was strange is that I found that there was no research on Female Genital Mutilation in South Africa,” says Subrayan.

A SILENT VIOLENCE

She focused her research on the doctors who were coming across FGM, through exploring their knowledge, awareness and attitudes towards this extreme form of gender violence. What came out in Subrayan’s study was that the majority of those who answered the anonymous questionnaire had come across FGM and had difficulty in dealing with patients who had experienced the trauma. Subrayan discovered that South African doctors are seeing some of the worst forms of FGM. It is being performed in some north-east African migrant communities.

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“What we are seeing is Type 3 Female Genital Mutilation or infibulation. This is where they don't just cut out areas of the clitoris or the vaginal lips, they also sew it shut,” says Subrayan. This is to prevent intercourse, and it begins when the girl is still a young child. “Sometimes they don’t even have a memory of this event,” says Subrayan. Bones are sometimes broken during the ritual. Infibulation causes other complications such as infection and severe pain. “Sometimes even wearing underwear is extremely painful for them.” There is also severe psychological trauma.

STATUS BY SCALPEL

FGM persists across Africa because of the social status it affords women, explains Professor Ngianga-Bakwin Kandala from the Wits School of Public Health. “FGM – a century-long tradition – is a social norm, meaning that in societies where cutting is the norm, being cut gives women social status and more social support among women and the community. In these societies, girls have more and better marriage opportunities and thus a better chance of bearing children,” he explains. “Furthermore, for young girls, it is usually undertaken as a cultural or a religious practice, a coming-of-age ritual, or one that sanctifies a girl’s purity or makes her more attractive to a potential husband – hence the persistence of the practice from generation to generation.”

SAVING SEXUALITY

Across the globe, countries are seeing a rise in reported FGM incidents because of migration and the practices of certain migrant communities.


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Articles inside

Towards gender parity in academic leadership

4min
pages 54-55

COLUMN

3min
pages 56-57

Philanthropy’s feminist future

3min
pages 52-53

Performing masculinity in Men’s Res

3min
pages 50-51

Real men lift others up and don't put them down

4min
pages 48-49

Big Data to combat gender crime?

5min
pages 44-45

Let’s talk about sex (and health please

6min
pages 42-43

Monstrous males/femme fatales

5min
pages 46-47

PROFILE

4min
pages 40-41

An illegal failure of our criminal justice system

3min
pages 38-39

Fractured Histories

4min
pages 28-29

Same-sexuality past and present

3min
pages 36-37

Monetising Pride

5min
pages 26-27

Parenting in the City

5min
pages 22-23

Not all are equal in the eyes of science

3min
pages 6-7

FEATURE

9min
pages 8-11

The knife between her thighs

5min
pages 14-15

Levelling the playing fields

6min
pages 18-19

Older people do bonk

5min
pages 24-25

The birds, the bees, and finding Nemo’s

6min
pages 16-17

The politics of a woman’s body

6min
pages 12-13
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