Report from Der Spiegel:
The Desert Flower Center, opening in Berlin this week, is the first facility in Europe to offer a comprehensive treatment package to victims of female genital mutilation. While they welcome the project, some activists believe the problem is more effectively addressed at its roots.
The Desert Flower Center, opening in Berlin this week, is the first facility in Europe to offer a comprehensive treatment package to victims of female genital mutilation. While they welcome the project, some activists believe the problem is more effectively addressed at its roots.
The leafy suburb of Zehlendorf in southwest Berlin is a far
cry from the dusty villages of Somalia. But the opening this week of the Desert
Flower Center marks an invisible bridge between Germany and the dozens of
African countries that practice female genital mutilation (FGM). Housed in the
Waldfriede Hospital, it is the first medical facility in Europe to offer
victims an integral treatment package, ranging from surgery to psychological
support.
The patron of the project is Waris Dirie, the Somalia-born
former supermodel and one-time Bond girl who has become one of the world's most
prominent campaigners against FGM.
At the age of 13, after being forced to marry a man old
enough to be her grandfather, Waris fled her homeland and moved to London. She
was discovered by a fashion photographer and went on to become an international
celebrity. In 1996, Kofi Annan, then secretary general of the United Nations,
appointed Dirie a UN special ambassador for the elimination of female genital
mutilation.
"The plan is to open Desert Flower Centers all over
Africa and worldwide," she told SPIEGEL ONLINE.
"All victims of FGM
who wish to receive psychological and physical treatment deserve free access to
surgery and psychological counseling. (This) is an important step toward a
self-determined and free life."
According to managing director Bernd Quoss, the first two
patients will be admitted this week. He is confident that demand exists.
"Around 50,000 women in Germany are affected by FGM and some 20,000 of
them are in Berlin," he estimates, stressing that the costs of treatment
will be covered for women with health insurance.
Awareness of a practice described by Dirie as "a brutal
crime" appears to be growing in Germany. In late June, the German
parliament redefined FGM as a criminal offence in its own right, punishable
with a jail term of up to 15 years. Previously, it fell under the grievous
bodily harm category, with sentencing restricted to a maximum of ten years.
The Role of Education
Defined by the World Health Organization as "partial or
total removal of the external female genitalia, or other injury to the female
genital organs for non-medical reasons," FGM's immediate complications
include severe pain, hemorrhage, bacterial infection and injury to surrounding
genital tissue. With long-term consequences including recurrent bladder and
urinary tract infections, cysts, infertility and an increased risk of
childbirth complications and newborn deaths, the Waldfriede hospital's
expertise in intestinal and pelvic floor surgery lends itself well to treating
victims of FGM, as Quoss points out.
Despite the risks, it remains commonplace in nearly 30
countries in western, eastern, and northeastern Africa, even though many of
them have either signed or ratified the 2003 Maputo Protocol, which calls for
an end to FGM. For the time being, it remains a deeply rooted social and
cultural requirement for girls before marriage, a supposed guarantee of sexual
chastity and fidelity.
4 year old girl undergoing female genital circumcision
If it takes 10 minutes to complete the average mutilation, 54 children are undergoing FGM right now.
Against this backdrop, the Desert Flower Center is also focusing on education. "One of the main goals is to train medical staff from Africa," explains Dirie.
If it takes 10 minutes to complete the average mutilation, 54 children are undergoing FGM right now.
Against this backdrop, the Desert Flower Center is also focusing on education. "One of the main goals is to train medical staff from Africa," explains Dirie.
Hadja Kitagbe Kaba, founder of Mama Afrika, a Berlin-based
organization that campaigns against FGM, sees this is as the most effective of
the center's strategies.
She comes from Guinea, where 98 percent of women have
suffered FGM, and, although she welcomes the opening of the Desert Flower
Center, she believes that female circumcision reversals are not a priority. She
would like to see more funds put to use in the field, with projects geared to
raising awareness among public health workers, community elders and, of course,
the women who still insist on subjecting their daughters to the procedure.
"Doctors in Germany will be repairing damage done in
Africa," she says. "It should never have to come to that. Any program
that addresses the issue is helpful. But above all, the problem needs to be
tackled at its source."
In Guinea, she points out, the practice is upheld as much
for economic as for socio-cultural reasons. "The women who perform female
circumcision have no other way to earn a living," she says.
Cultural Sensitivity
Not only does challenging a tradition dating back thousands
of years take time -- "I'm not sure I will see an end to the practice in
my lifetime," says Hadja Kitagbe Kaba -- there is also a fear in the
Western world that denouncing and combatting a cultural practice will bring
with it charges of racism.
It's an attitude that enrages Waris Dirie. "People in
the West would never accept the mutilation of a white girl. Do black girls not
have the same rights? FGM is torture. These uneducated people should read the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights and be quiet!" she says.
But she is well aware that cultural sensitivity must be of
paramount importance at the new Desert Flower Center, and that staff need to
grasp the extent to which seeking treatment for FGM could potentially alienate
many women from their communities.
"Waris Dirie was adamant that the patients shouldn't be
accommodated in a separate ward," says Bernd Quoss. "We want to avoid
the women feeling 'different' in any way. Hence the participation in the program
of counselors and social workers, many of whom have special training in
cultural diversity. We also intend to cooperate closely with local African
associations."
But it's not only the women themselves who need convincing.
"I spoke to a woman recently who said she'd like to undergo reconstructive
surgery at the new center," says Hadja Kitagbe Kaba. "But she didn't
think she would do it. 'How could I ever explain it to my husband?,' she asked
me."
Commenters on the report say that there are two French doctors who have been doing reconstructive surgery on FGM women in Africa and France for 30 years. But with 50,000 victims in Germany alone, this is a problem that's not going to be solved by surgery.
It needs the great Physician, the only One with the power and resources to bring about such a dramatic cultural shift. Please join my 3:15 PM prayer group.
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