Posted on 09/04/2007 7:10:57 PM PDT by Free ThinkerNY
Barbarism in Bremen (German police save two infant girls from female genital mutilation)
By Stephen Brown
FrontPageMagazine.com | 9/4/2007
It was an anti-terrorism raid with a big difference.
Police in Bremen, Germany, raided an apartment recently not to arrest any terrorists but rather to prevent two of its occupants from being terrorized by another form of barbarism: female genital mutilation. In what has been described as a first by a German womens organization, authorities in the northern, port city were able to intervene and thwart a planned, female circumcision of two girls aged one and four. The infants, taken into state care, were to have undergone the horrifying procedure in their 25-year-old mothers native country of Gambia at a female circumcision ritual.
However, the girls German father discovered the mothers gruesome plan when he returned home one evening and found two packed bags and his daughters missing. Very fortunately for the girls, their father was vehemently opposed to the hideous ordeal his wife of five years, whom he had married according to Muslim law, was planning for them. Already aware of the fathers fierce opposition to her scheme, the mother had hidden the intended victims among countrymen at another apartment, from which at least the one-year-old was slated to leave the next day for the West African country.
An ensuing, loud argument between the two parents about the mothers scheme luckily drew a visit from the police, now keen on finding the two little girls. The mother, however, refused to help the authorities and was taken into custody for obstructing police. But other Gambian women indicated where the toddlers were hidden, leading to their timely rescue.
It is estimated that 30,000 women living in Germany have undergone female genital mutilation, most in their native countries, and are part of the one hundred and thirty million women worldwide who have suffered the same, tragic fate. In addition, three million females, mostly girls aged four to ten, but babies as well, undergo this savage operation every year, while in Germany alone as many as 5,000 girls are in danger annually of joining that number.
According to one German publication, female genital mutilation is carried on especially in Africa where about 90 to 100 per cent of the women in such countries as Somalia, the Sudan and Gambia are circumcised. It is also practiced in the Middle Eastern countries of Oman, Yemen and the United Arab Emirates, but does not exist in any North African country except for Egypt. Muslims in Indonesia and Malaysia also subject women to it. But while Muslim women are the main victims of female genital mutilation, African animist tribes, Coptic Christians and Ethiopian Jews also are guilty of the horrid practice, which pre-dates Islam. As well, many of these countries have launched their own campaigns to eradicate this terrible social blight.
The reasons given for the revolting practice are that it is traditional and prevents women from having sexual feelings, thus saving them from their own sexuality and leaving them pure for a future husband. An impure, or uncircumcised, woman would never be able to marry in some of the above-mentioned countries cultures. The practice, therefore, ensures the girls future standing as a wife and mother.
Female genital mutilation first came to the attention of western nations, including the United States and Canada, in the 1990s. Immigrants and refugees from the approximately 25 countries where it is practiced brought this anti-civilizational custom with them. One writer stated that hardly anything at that time shook western states more deeply than the realization that this brutal habit was being carried on within their borders.
Since then, western countries have introduced legal measures to fight the practice. It is now grounds for an asylum claim in some industrial states. As well, in 1999 in France, for the first time a woman was also given a long, prison sentence for having performed innumerable female circumcisions, while the parents were given probation. France and Germany have also made it illegal not only to have the offensive procedure done within their borders, but also abroad, since parents were flying their daughters back to their native countries after its proscription in the West.
One such victim, Fatou Bah, who now opposes the practice, gave a poignant account to a French newspaper about how she flew with her father back to her parents native Guinea in Africa, ostensibly to get to know her grandmother before she died. Fatou, now a mother of a girl herself, was 11-years old and had been born in France and grown up French, which naturally left her completely unprepared her for her the terrifying ordeal.
Her first week in Guinea was calm, Fatou related, with unknown women passing by, who talked with her father. One afternoon during the next week, however, she found herself stretched out in a room beside six other small girls for the operation, done without anesthetic. A girl lying beside Fatou died from it. Once back in France, her mother showed her daughter off like a trophy to the cousins who congratulated the parent for not forgetting the traditions. And when Fatou cried, the little girls mother warned her not to denounce her parents to the authorities or they would go to jail and she would be put in a home where she would be beaten and receive nothing to eat. Her father simply threatened to kill her if she did so.
Now joining the fight against this barbarism fit for a medieval torture chamber are European Muslim women who have themselves been genitally mutilated. The most prominent among them is Dutch-Somali Muslim dissident, Ayaan Hirsi Ali, the former Dutch Member of Parliament whose best-selling autobiography, Infidel, outlines in painful, excruciating detail her own terrible genital mutilation experience as well as that of her younger sisters, who, she claims, was never the same person afterwards. Both sisters had their inner labia and clitoris cut off by a man with a pair of scissors, causing her indescribable, piercing pain and bloodcurdling howls from her sister.
But the brutality Hirsi Ali and her sister underwent is often only the victims first experience in what will afterwards become a life of physical pain and psychological torment. While five to ten per cent of the girls who undergo the often unhygienic procedure die, many others will suffer for years from various medical complications from the mutilation.
Nevertheless, despite all efforts to prevent it, Hirsi Ali and others maintain that female genital mutilation is still being carried out on kitchen tables in Western Europe. Ten per cent of German gynecologists in a 2005 survey said they had heard of female circumcisions performed in Germany, while almost half of them stated they had treated women who had undergone the cruelty. Some European nations like Germany are now also considering legally required medical examinations of girls before and after they visit countries where the practice is carried on. But more education, experts say, is needed for prevention and a good place to start is with those circumcised women treated by medical professionals.
Another good start is books to inform the general public like Die Traenen der Toechter (The Tears of the Daughters), an autobiography by the Senegalese woman, Khady, who describes her genital mutilation at age seven like a rat attacked my body. It was seventh on the bestseller list in France when published in 2005 and was on Germanys bestsellers list last July. Like Hirsi Ali and Fatou Bah, what Khady wants is that women do not let this barbarism be repeated on their daughters, who are already born or are still to be born, from which they will have to suffer their whole lives.
And you can bet these three compassionate women, who have had to suffer so much from this barbaric practice and know firsthand the terrible fate that awaited the two innocent Bremen girls in Gambia, appreciate very much the efforts of their German father and the Bremen police in saving their precious lives from ruination and perhaps even from death.
So the mother wanted them to go, the father is opposed. What’s his religion?
Celebrate diversity. All cultures are equal.
You wouldn’t believe the amount of people who have looked at me like I was crazy when I said that cultures are not all equal.
I had a professor feed me that line once, I nearly came unglued. I wish I had been on my toes at the time, since it was only after the class that I remembered about Muslims and genital mutilation. At the time I was so dang mad I couldn’t think straight.
If they are female, suggest you will be happy to listen to their point of view after they have this procedure, performed with a rusty, dull, razor blade.
How sickening...How evil...
I could not read it all the way through..
I wanted to vomit..
What barbarism...
When I saw the word “barbarism,” I immediately began to look for “Muslim.” Sure enough, I wasn’t disappointed. Wherever you find the latter, you inevitably find the former.
I’m not sure. The article states, “he married the mother in a muslim ritual”. Would they say that if he was another muslim? It sounds more as if he was German or non-muslim.
Of course, you can read too much into an article, as they are often inaccurate.
“When I saw the word barbarism, I immediately began to look for Muslim. Sure enough, I wasnt disappointed. Wherever you find the latter, you inevitably find the former.”
ISLAM IS A MENTAL ILLNESS:
http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9B04E5D81F39F936A15755C0A9629C8B63
Published: June 25, 2004
Hundreds of Muslims have flocked to the Essen University clinic where, an Internet site said, a messiah was being breast-fed by his resurrected mother, a hospital spokesman, Burkhard Büscher, said. The vision, discussed on www.turkdunya.de, held that a woman in the clinic had given birth to a messiah, known in Islam as mahdi, but then died, Mr. Büscher said. She was later dug up and was still alive, and ‘’Allah ordered the woman to feed the child for 40 days and then die again,’’ he added. In the face of strong denials by the clinic, the number of visitors has dwindled.
At least the German government put the welfare of children above political correctness - and in the name of the children, for once, it is actually true.
They got lucky, unfortunately, here.
Perhaps it was this line from the last paragraph:
"...two innocent Bremen girls in Gambia, appreciate very much the efforts of their German father and the Bremen police..."
I imagine from this that he was secular, and found out the hard way what islam had in store for his children.
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