Amani Wright
4/19/11
1:50pm
Nancy, a young teen girl, though very obedient and well-behaved, has refused to undergo the routine labia and clitoris removal of her culture. This practice was started centuries ago to keep wives from straying when husbands were away. Now it is a way to prove that one is strong enough to be a part of her culture.
A teen girl, Gertrude, reports that her friends who have had the operation were all cut with the same knife. If any of them had a disease, they would all have it.
An older woman describes how teen girls bleed profusely, go into shock, and even die during this operation.
Culture is the very thing that makes us who we are before we even know who that person is. However, there are people who rebel against this predetermined identity, because they don’t agree with it. Nancy has been scared into bravery. While it is her culture to have her clitoris and labia removed, she says ‘no’; ‘No’ to possible infection, ‘no’ to the pain and blood in the name of culture. Many people all over the world have begun to rebel against certain cultural practices as a way of liberating themselves from the stronghold of something that doesn’t make sense to them.
While not going through with this mutilation will hold Nancy at a low place in society, making her ineligible for marriage, she feels it is her right not to put herself at risk of disease, and even death, and she doesn’t need to do so to achieve her life goals.