The undergraduate thesis deals with the issue of female genital mutilation (FGM), the ritual partial or total removal of the female external genitalia or other injury to the female genital organs for non-medical reasons, which can cause severe bleeding, infections, infertility and even death.
It is a misconception that FGM is outdated or irrelevant in today's society, on the contrary - according to the WHO (2023), more than 200 million girls and women alive today in 30 countries in Africa, the Middle East and Asia where FGM is practised have been subjected to female genital mutilation (FGM). Due to the migration of African and some Asian migrants, FGM is also being integrated into the cultural space of the countries of the so-called »developed world«. Today, FGM is seen in the USA, Canada and many European countries, especially where there are large numbers of African immigrants who still follow the tradition, even though circumcision of women and girls is prohibited by law in some countries.
The UN, UNICEF and WHO define FGM as a violation of human rights and have been trying for years to eradicate or at least outlaw the practice.It is easy for the Global North to label FGM as a brutal practice and to condemn violence, but for those who carry out the practice, it is not morally reprehensible. Instead, it is a millennia-old, culturally-supported rite of passage essential for young women. A girl is circumcised to be more chaste, more valuable and more attractive to her husband-to-be. She is circumcised so that she may know what it means to be a woman. This passage is meant to purify the girl, to elevate her to a sacred state and to teach her the rules and laws of her society.
By analysing the literature to date, which intertwines the fields of religious ritual, pain and moral judgement, the present work seeks to answer the question of it's title: is female circumcision a religious obligation or "the cruellest cut"? In order to provide an answer to my research question, I propose a new question, which serves as a litmus test and which I consider crucial for every participant in a ritual involving the body to ask: Does this ritual help me more than harm me?
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