GENITAL MUTILATION IS
TRADITIONAL IN IRAQ'S KURDISTAN
INTERNATIONAL
By Nicholas
Birch - WeNews correspondent
SULAIMANIYAH,
Kurdistan (WOMENSENEWS)--With
her six children and her fine-boned
face aged beyond her 39 years,
Amina Khidir seems a fairly
ordinary Kurdish farmer's
wife. Unlike most, though,
she also has a job. She circumcises
girls.
"My mother
taught me the technique,"
she says, sitting cross-legged
in her house in Zurkan, a
village in the remote Pizhdar
district of northeastern Iraqi
Kurdistan. "I took over
three years ago, just before
she died."
Her first operation,
she remembers, was on her
own daughter. She says she
didn't feel nervous. "I
had spent years watching how
the cut was done. And my daughter
was a baby at the time, too
small to understand what was
happening. That's the best
age to do it."
In a matter-of-fact-way,
Khidir talks about how she
handles the aftermath of her
work. She describes applying
oak wood charcoal to reduce
pain in the wound and sitting
the child in a bowl of cold
water and antiseptic solution
after the operation. When
asked about the specifics
of the procedure she performs,
however, she covers her face
with her loosely worn headscarf
and refrains from speaking
too specifically.
"I cut
about a quarter off with a
razor," she says, in
an apparent reference to the
so-called Sunna circumcision,
a mutilation that some clerics
have attributed to a tradition
taught by the Prophet Mohamed
that involves removing the
prepuce. Sometimes the clitoris
is left intact, but sometimes
part of or all of it is removed.
Dreaming
of an End
Qalthum Murat,
an advocate of secularism
and modernity in one of the
most socially conservative,
tribal parts of northern Iraq,
knows Khidir's story--and
others like them--all too
well. She dreams of the day
when she will hear them no
more.
The 24-year-old
spends four days a week visiting
the women of outlying villages
to bring basic health advice,
largely to do with food and
sanitation. Each of these
days, she struggles with the
divisions between rural and
urban Iraqi Kurdish society.
Superficially,
little separates her from
women such as Khidir. She
still lives barely 15 miles
from Khidir's village, in
the scruffy, impoverished
smuggling town where she was
brought up, Raniya. She left
school at 16.
Politics, however,
have shielded her from genital
mutilation. Her family sympathizes
with the radical wing of the
Patriotic Union of Kurdistan,
the more progressive of the
two parties that have ruled
Iraqi Kurdistan since it broke
away from Baghdad in 1991.
Murat has been
a member of the local branch
of the PUK's Women's Union
since she was 15. Last year,
Rewan, a women's group based
in the regional capital of
Sulaimaniyah, invited her
to join. The group has been
fighting for a decade to eradicate
female genital mutilation
from Iraqi Kurdistan.
Mobile Health-Awareness
Classes
Given a grant
six months ago by coalition
authorities to provide mobile
health awareness classes to
the women of the Pizhdar district,
Rewan charged Murat with collecting
data about the prevalence
of female genital mutilation.
The cassettes she plays to
villagers--followed by a question-and-answer
session--warn about the health
dangers both of FGM and the
widespread local tradition
of marrying girls off very
young.
Murat admits
that the two sides of her
work sometimes come into conflict.
"The survey will only
be accurate if I win the trust
of villagers," she says.
At the same time, she describes
herself as being like an anti-FGM
missionary.
More prominently
associated with several countries
in Africa--where some traditional
midwives are giving up their
FGM work in response to public-health
and legal efforts--female
genital mutilation is also
practiced in the Arabian peninsula
and other areas of the Middle
East.
There are now
some penalties for practicing
FGM in Iraqi Kurdistan. Certified
midwives caught operating
on girls lose their certification.
But activists admit threats
of legal action rarely have
any effect on traditional
practitioners in the villages,
who work in the secrecy of
their homes.
The main problem--as
with other countries in the
region--is that statistics
are totally lacking. A countrywide
health survey done by the
New York-based United Nations
Children's Fund, UNICEF, between
1998 and 2002 returned no
FGM data. Large surveys since
the war have not touched on
the phenomenon.
Better Data
on FGM in Region
In areas of
Iraq under Saddam Hussein's
control until last year, efforts
to fill in the blanks left
by that study have barely
begun. In Kurdish areas, by
contrast, attempts to quantify
the phenomenon are way ahead.
They began over a decade ago,
as part of a wave of national
regeneration that swept the
region following its de facto
secession in 1991.
One of the first
on the scene was Qalthum Murat's
colleague, Runak Faraj, editor
of the women's bimonthly newspaper
published by Rewan since 1992.
She has come to two conclusions;
that the practice is limited
to the southern half of Iraqi
Kurdistan and is most prevalent
in rural areas.
"In Sulaimaniyah
city, figures suggest only
2-3 percent of women have
been circumcised . . . almost
all of them (living) in the
poorer suburbs," Faraj
says. In the remote border
regions of Qaladze, Raniya
and Pizhdar, meanwhile, she
thinks female genital mutilation
is almost universal.
There is evidence
to back up her estimates.
In Zurkan, Amina
Khidir's village, there are
300 families and three women
who practice genital mutilation.
In Raniya, professional midwife
Khadija Zaher has been helping
local women through childbirth
for 14 years.
"It's only
in the last two years that
I've begun to see women who
have not been circumcised,"
she says.
Not everyone
agrees that the practice is
so common, though. "With
aid money available to those
with the most apocalyptic
statistics, it is easy to
exaggerate," warns Thomas
von der Osten-Sacken, whose
German nongovernmental organization,
based in Sulaimaniyah, specializes
in women's issues. "I
personally suspect that circumcision
levels for women in the Sulaimaniyah
governorate are much closer
to 10 percent than the 40
percent suggested by some."
Beyond Statistics
But it is not
just the absence of reliable
statistics that hampers the
work of groups like Rewan.
There is also the gulf that
separates practitioners from
those trying to dissuade them.
"I often
feel like the two Kurdish
communists who went round
villages trying to convince
people that God was an illusion,"
laughs Qalthum Murat, referring
to the anti-FGM cassettes
she works with. "The
villagers listened politely,
brought tea, nodded gravely.
At the end, one of them sighed,
'Yes, this is a complicated
business, but God is great.
He will find a solution.'"
For four years
after she began her campaign
to eradicate female genital
mutilation in 1992, Rewan's
Runak Faraj found that her
activists--mainly secular-minded
urban women--were struggling
to communicate with villagers.
It was then that she decided
to talk directly to the clerics
who exert such influence over
the local way of life.
"Of course,
it was ultimately a decision
of individual imams,"
she says, referring to the
religious leaders. "Some
refused to cooperate but most
did. Two senior clerics in
particular, Mullah Mohamed
Amin and Mullah Mohamed Saleh,
are now among the most active
in the campaign to eradicate
the practice."
Qalthum Murat
is more pessimistic. "In
almost every village I visit,
it is the old women and the
clerics who most strongly
oppose my work. They accuse
me of being an atheist and
a member of the PKK,"
she says, referring to the
extreme left-wing Turkish
Kurdish armed separatist group
that has its base in the mountains
just behind Zurkan.
"Unless
local authorities begin to
take the matter seriously,
I am afraid it will be a long
time before this practice
disappears from the region."
Nicholas
Birch is a freelancer based
in Turkey and working throughout
the region. His work has appeared
in the Washington Post, The
Guardian, The Christian Science
Monitor, and The Globe and
Mail.
For more
information:
Women's eNews,
June 7, 2004-- - "U.S.
Doc's Specialty Is Women with
Cut Genitals" http://womensenews.org/article.cfm/dyn/aid/1862/
Women's eNews,
December 3, 2003-- - "Female
Mutilations Slow, But Only
Gradually": - http://womensenews.org/article.cfm/dyn/aid/1656/
Women's eNews,
December 7, 2003-- - "Senegal
Program Eradicating FGM":
- http://womensenews.org/article.cfm/dyn/aid/1630/