On July 5, 2007 20 girls participating in the Valuable
Girl Project along with Coptic Orphans staff marched with other organizations
to demand the end of female circumcision. The march was organized in
the wake of the recent death of 12 year old Bedour Shaker, who died
while being subjected to female circumcision at an illegal clinic in
Assuit.
The National Council for Childhood and Motherhood (NCCM)
organized the march, which included groups such as the National Red
Crescent Society and the Coptic Orphans partner Association of Upper
Egypt for Education and Development. Participants carried signs often
featuring Bedour Shaker’s picture and messages such as “
No
to FGM,” “We don’t want FGM for our Girls,” and “Give Us a Law to Protect
Us.”
Female circumcision, or female genital mutilation, refers
to the intentional removal of or damage to the external female genitalia.
It is believed in Egypt and other parts of Africa and the Middle East
to preserve a girl's honor.
Despite global concerns, female genital mutilation remains
commonly practiced in Egypt . UNICEF estimated in 2005 that 97% of
women between the ages of 15 and 45 have been subjected to the practice,
and Egypt 's Ministry of Health and Population concludes in a recent
survey that at least 50 percent of girls between the ages of 10-18
years in Egypt have undergone genital mutilation.
Suzanne Mubarak, Egypt ’s first lady, says that even
with current widespread practice, "Bedour's death is the beginning
of the end for female circumcision in Egypt ... the most vicious practice
committed against women." Coptic Orphans joined the march last
week to ensure that it is indeed the beginning of the end for female
genital mutilation.
One girl who participated in the march from the Valuable
Girl Project commented: “we have talked a lot about this practice,
but marching for it has left a great impact on us. We must get this
message to the whole world.”
Coptic Orphans is an award-winning international Christian
development organization that works with vulnerable children in Egypt
to transform their local communities by breaking the cycles of poverty
and injustice through literacy, education, advocacy, mentoring, and
basic needs. Since the founding of the organization in 1988, Coptic
Orphans has touched the lives of over 14,000 children in Egypt .