SMRs and AMRs

Sunday, October 16, 2011

Senegal Curbs a Bloody Rite, African-Style

Lynsey Addario for The New York Times — Sare Harouna, in southern Senegal, is one of more than 5,000 villages where female genital cutting has been abandoned.

By CELIA W. DUGGER
NYT

SARE HAROUNA, Senegal — When Aissatou Kande was a little girl, her family followed a tradition considered essential to her suitability to marry. Her clitoris was sliced off with nothing to dull the pain.

But on her wedding day, Ms. Kande, her head modestly covered in a plain white shawl, vowed to protect her own daughters from the same ancient custom. Days later, her village declared it would abandon female genital cutting for good.

Across the continent, an estimated 92 million girls and women have undergone it. But like more than 5,000 other Senegalese villages, Sare Harouna has joined a growing movement to end the practice.

The change has not yet reached Ms. Kande’s new home in her husband’s village, but if elders there pressured her to cut the baby girl she is taking into the marriage, she said, “I would resist them.” Her parents back her up.

(More here.)

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