Hello, there is a part of your body which enhances sexual pleasure due
to the presence of nerve receptors and perhaps, offers lifelong protection
kinda. In spite of all its qualities and not, it harbours dirt... we will have
to chop it off. No, don’t ask why.
(Conversation that happened in my
head: Hello, this is your brain. Do you really want to write this and be known
as the young woman who wrote about this?)
Well, I did not have the good
sense to listen, so, here goes:
Dick, prick... Words I have
learnt to blush saying or hearing all my life. Especially “prick” a word I
loathe very much. There is a story in there for another day. I take particular
offence to the word “prick” because it reminds me of a lewd sick man (Now, I
hate to even use the word “sick” in relation to the man, he contaminates the
word) I met as a girl of fourteen. He was the first person to use the word
“prick” to me. I hated his insinuations, his tone of voice, his lewdness; to
cut it short, my encounter with him signalled a lifelong feud with the
blameless word “prick”. Blameless, yes, because it is not about the word
“prick”. What is wrong, for example, with a person saying “I pricked my thumb
with a needle?”
It is about what it referred to:
penis. Yes, I said it. Penis. A word we so love to shy away from saying. Did
you know it was not pronounced “pe-nis” but “pi-nis”? As I grow older, I have
found myself using the word on occasion and when I do, I sit up mentally and
become all serious. Like, I dare you to make a joke of it. Yet, it is not about
the word “penis”. If the word “penis” referred to school children marching on a
lawn for example, there would have been no hush-hush around it. I have heard
parents call it “tomboy”, “wee-wee”... children pick up the ... from their
parents. I did. There, you have it, my penis subtext or history.
Before setting out to write this
post, I spent a whole car-ride from Ibadan to Osogbo pondering where to begin.
Should I begin with an announcement that I am taking on something people would
prefer me to leave alone? I remembered my father looking at me as I made a
point as a secondary school girl and advising: “Don’t be a leftist.” We always
communicate in Yoruba. You can only imagine the seriousness that warranted that
English.
Should I begin with a reference
to the my status update on Facebook over a year ago on Female Genital
Mutilation? We all spoke about it, angrily, passionately. It turned up
important posters, one of them, a name I had only ever seen in magazines.
People were angry. We were talking about the barbarism of mutilating the
“blameless Vulva” as Alice Walker refers to it. We, amazons, picked up our
spears and dashed out in fear of the blameless vulva. My sister and I, who can
barely agree on women affairs, agreed on it. Female Genital Mutilation is a
beast, Hitler, the devil, the this, the
that. It was atomic bomb and all. We
called it Female Genital Mutilation and addressed it as such but what we were
essentially defending, which we did not mention, was the vulva.
Then, recently, I started to
think of the foreskin which Sorrells et al (2007) refers to as the most
sensitive part of the penis. Was the foreskin equally as blameless as the
vulva? I remember my baby brother, boisterous, being taken to the hospital. He
was some few weeks old. When he returned, he was subdued. He was not crying but
he had the look of someone who had cried till he was emptied out. He returned
as a half-empty sack of potato. Yes, children forget pain. I am sure if I asked
him now, he probably would not remember the pain on a subconscious level. Yet,
some people do not have the privilege of forgetting; one of them, my father,
who vividly remembers his circumcision at the age of fourteen and the hellish
two weeks that followed.
I started to wonder, why is there
so much noise about FGM while everyone is very accepting of male circumcision? How
many people know that every year, over hundred boys die from circumcision every
year in the US alone? What is more, the deaths are often not attributed to
circumcision in the death reports but to other causes like infection, bleeding,
etc. And yet, experts, when pressed, attest to the point that circumcision has
no intrinsic benefit. My question is not “why do we have to circumcise our
boys?” My question is “Why do we have to cut off the foreskin of our boys,
while ignoring their shrieks? What purpose does it serve?
Dan Bolinger’s stance, which
seems pretty sensible to me, is that circumcision, which could be harmful and dangerous, should not be carried out on
minors or babies. I agree with Bolinger that such decision should not
be made for a person. Why is the foreskin the business of the society?
You would ask me if I would circumcise
my son(s) if I had them. Well, to be honest, the answer is that I do not know.
I think being able to stand and be honestly confused is the beauty of my
journey as an individual. I had a lecturer when I was an undergraduate that
would ask, “Are you confused? It is good to be confused. It shows that you are
thinking.” In secondary school, I remember ending debates with a flourish, “I
hope I have been able to convince you
and not to confuse you that moinmoin
is better than akara.”
Here, however, I do not wish to
have convinced you. Heck, I am not convinced myself. I wish to confuse you. Our
humanity lies in our ability to be confused... to be able to stop in our tracks
and ask, but why did we choose this path?
N:B: In case you didn’t know,
there is a process known as “Foreskin Restoration” and a movement, “Intactivism,”
simply put, let the equally blameless “foreskin” be. I have heard the case for “Intactivism”,
I have not heard the case for chop it off...
I'm all ears...
Beautiful write-up. You've left me confused and I'm going to get answers. Will be back to share with you
ReplyDeleteThanks for reading. It is a pleasure knowing I have succeeded in getting a thoughtful person confused. I look forward to those answers.
ReplyDeleteNice write-up.
ReplyDeleteConfused is the right word. I don't know whether this is neo-feminism or or humanist activism. Nice piece Funmi, more ink to your pen.
ReplyDeleteThanks... if I were permitted to, I would call it humanism.
DeleteExcelent write up. Funmi, I will comment again after I have absorbed every wording. Keep it up.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Uju. I look forward to reading your view.
DeleteHmmm. Deep thought, nice write up. In life there is not a thing or a process that does not have two side to it. A cry to stop male circumcision because of the pains is like saying women should not give birth in the natural way because of the pains the do have to go through. A little research into this issue showed that the benefits of cirumcision outweighs it's disadvantages.moreover, amongst the things I don't debate on is the creators principles for Life. A little deviation from these principles has always left the world in disarray.
ReplyDeleteFinally, I found answers. I think it's time for us to reconsider some of the things we do all in the name of tradition/religion. Remaining intact for a guy is of more benefit than getting circumcised. The foreskin is supposed to protect the inner part of the Penis, why take it away? Also, why put your child through a painful experience when you can avoid it. Circumcision and childbirth are totally different,it can't be compared.
ReplyDeleteAs for the stand of the Bible on circumcision; it is true God made a covenant with Abraham in Gen 17,but the truth is Jesus has come to bridge that gap. Acts 15, 1Cor7:18-19 explains what the truth is now. You do not have to be circumcised to belong to God.
Although it's going to be a tough call to make but I'm sure I'll rather have my male child intact than circumcised
Thanks for taking the time to return with your findings, as promised. It doesn't make much sense for baby boys to suffer so much for something people just take for granted. If we ever have to allow pain, were the choice to lie with us, it should be for a purpose.
DeleteConvincingly confused. Lol. Beautiful piece. Thumbs FGH
ReplyDelete