The road to Little Red Ella and the FGM by Sandra Horn
Warning: some of the ensuing post is absolutely grim, but
please read it anyway.
This picture has nothing much to do with the blog, except that it is a woman of noble bearing
Long years ago, as a
callow undergraduate, I once debated cultural relativism with my late and
much-lamented Prof. Marie Jahoda. I was for it, I said. ‘OK,’ she replied, ‘you
are walking along and you hear screams. Some women are holding a young girl in
the cold waters of a stream to dull the pain before they excise her clitoris
with a sharp stone. It’s a cultural thing; a rite of passage, so of course you
wouldn’t intervene.’ She had, as they
say, got me there. I think I said something feeble, like I still upheld the
principle while agreeing that the specifics were sometimes abominable and should
be countered. Fast forward 30 years or
so and a medical student comes to see me to ask if I will supervise her special
project. She’s a Somali; a lovely girl with her head covered modestly in a
scarf. Her project is on female circumcision. I assume that she wants to expose
it as barbaric, but no. She wants to explore its cultural relevance and develop
an explanatory paper about it. I am surprised but I keep my counsel. She’s
bright and determined and has access to women’s groups from countries where it
is practised, so she sets off to do her interviews. Some weeks later, she comes
back profoundly moved and distressed by what she’s heard, and the project
becomes about telling of the women’s experiences and suffering.
Fast forward another 20 years and I am in a SheWrites
scriptwriting group led by the inestimable Angie Street. She challenges us to
write about not-written-about issues for women and to start with short scripts
about menstruation. Much of the writing is sharp, funny and liberating. Then
we’re off on our own topics and I am drawn back to what we now call Female
Genital Mutilation (FGM) – which is not, by the way, an exclusively Islamic
practice. It goes back at least to the time of Abraham and has been, and is,
practised in some Christian subgroups and one Jewish sect. It is currently
practised in many African countries, among others, and the prevalence varies
across ethnic groups. (1). It may be performed during infancy, adolescence, or
during a woman’s first pregnancy, usually by a woman. In some cultures, a woman
is not marriageable unless she has been circumcised. In its least severe form,
the clitoris is ablated. In other cases, the labia minora are also removed. In
the worst form of FGM, the labia majora are cut away and the edges of the wound
are stitched together until they heal and form scar tissue, which binds them
together. This leaves a small hole for the passage of menses and urine. The
horrors of intercourse and giving birth can hardly be imagined. I couldn’t NOT
write about it, but how? I was
absolutely bebothered for ages, couldn’t leave it alone, couldn’t do it, until
the idea of a pantomime fell into my head. Thus, Little Red Ella and the FGM,
which also stands for Fairy GodMother, of course. It’s written in panto
doggerel. The FGM appears and asks Ella if she’s like to marry a handsome
prince. Well, who wouldn’t? The only thing is, it requires a ‘small’ procedure:
the amputation of Ella’s ‘nasty, hairy, stick-outy things (toes) so she can fit
into dainty little shoes...never mind that she’ll be in pain crippled, etc. it’s
cultural, traditional, and Hey! she’ll marry a prince! Except that she won’t,
she announces. It’s her body, her toes, and to hell with any prince or Fairy,
for that matter) who asks such a cruel sacrifice of her.
It’s very short, and to my surprise and delight has been
chosen by Juno Women’s Theatre for performance at the Salisbury Fringe
Festival. I can’t judge if it ‘works’ on the page, so seeing it in performance
will be invaluable and if it is what I hope – a thought-provoking message
delivered in an off-beat way, I hope it will be taken up by schools, etc. If
anyone is interested, I’ll send it out after the October 4th
performance.
( (1)
Source:
http://www.guttmacher.org/pubs/journals/2313097.html
Comments
Very clever, that FGM=Fairy God Mother.
As for 'cultural relativism', my local council used to go in for that in a big way, resulting in the ghastly death of a little girl at the hands of her auntie who thought she was a witch. Ugh.
Congrats on getting it out there.
Excuse me, but bollocks.
What it actually should mean is: 'Something is not good or evil just because my culture says it is so. Another culture may well have a better solution to this particular moral problem. Therefore I need to think outside my own culture when considering the morality of an action.'
In other words, morality transcends and supersedes all individual cultures. We need to look beyond culture when deciding what is the right thing to do.