This story comes from a 14 year old girl living in our village .”I was six years old when it happened to me. I knew what was going to happen, I knew they were going to cut me because a lot of my friends had had it done and Iโd had a look โ it was quite normal for girls to have a look at each other. My friends had told me that it was really painful, that it was horrible, so I was terrified. It happened when my mother was away and relatives were looking after me and my sister.
In the morning, when I was at school, they told me it was โmy timeโ. My uncle and aunt came to take me from the school. It was my sisterโs time too โ she was eight years old. The woman who cut us was my grandmotherโs sister โ and she was going to cut us in a tent near a huge tree. They used ropes to tie our legs apart and there were lots and lots of girls there. I could hear screaming, lots of horrible screaming and there was so much blood. Girls were crying.
My sister went first, they cut her then they took her somewhere. I heard she fainted. My grandmotherโs sister was cutting so many girls and when my sister had been done, she told her to stand just outside, and the blood was running down her legs, then she fainted. My grandmother was screaming at her sister โ asking her how she could do this to her grandchildren. She was terrified that my sister would die. But my great aunt insisted, and they said it was my turn. I ran away โ I ran as fast as I could but they sent boys after me and they caught me. They took me legs and my arms and carried me back. One of them was my older brother โ he helped carry me back to the cutter.
They tied me down, I was fighting as hard as I could, but they were stronger. I was screaming. The old woman, my great aunt, used a razor blade โ it was clean and new, but there was no anaesthetic when she cut me. I have no memory at all of her cutting me โ itโs blank. But then another woman came, she was from a different city, and she gave me an injection before they stitched me up. They tied my legs together the whole way down so I couldnโt open my legs, I was like that for three or four weeks.
I remember my grandmother taking me home and telling me I had to pee, I was terrified. Because my legs were tied I couldnโt sit to pee, so I leaned over on one side and the pain was unbearable. I jumped, and some of the stitches opened. My neighbour, she was in her 30s, said I would have to be sewn up again but my grandmother refused.When I came to Nairobi and I started having periods, the problems started. I had to go to the doctor and they opened me, so everything is much better, but there are still some problems. Lots of people from my community believe that if you are โopenโ (havenโt undergone FGM), no man will want to marry you, and they keep telling me that.
This may sound strange, but Iโm not angry about what happened to me. Thereโs no point, I donโt want to spend my life feeling anger and hate. I want to be at peace”.Let’s end Female Genital Mutilation.Thank you .
10 Responses
Thank you ,we must end FGM
Indeed we must end FGM.
Yes we must build good governance to help us stop FGM
It’s a good story that we must investigate to know more ,and this girls are suffering in silent .
Yes ,it’s difficult for some to open up on this matter since ,they will feel like ,they will be discriminated
This is a great stories that action needs to be taken in our village
Yes ,if we build good foundation,we can achieve this .
We must FGM indeed.
It should be mandatory for government to stop all forms of FGM
We applaud the thousands of communities that have made public declarations to abandon this harmful practice.
While progress is being made, up to 30 million girls under the age of 15 remain at risk, and some 125 million girls and women have undergone the procedure.
FGM violates the basic rights of women and girls and seriously compromises their health. It poses increased risk of HIV transmission, infection or prolonged bleeding and increased risks during childbirth. It leaves lasting physical and emotional scars.
While the practice of FGM is a tradition in some parts of the world, it cannot be justified on the grounds of religion or culture. It is a violation of human rights and a manifestation of gender inequality.
To end FGM, leadership is needed at every level, from Governments to community and religious leaders, medical professionals and families.