Towards a solution concerning female genital mutilation? An approach from within according to Islamic legal opinions

Authors

  • Jens Kutscher Erlangen Centre for Islam and Law in Europe

Keywords:

Female circumcision, Islam, Islamic law, Qurʼān -- Law, Gender, Women, Culture and religion -- Africa, Body, Human, Sex, Fatwas, Internet, Media and religion, Human rights

Abstract

Female circumcision is a tradition that is widespread and not restricted to predominantly Muslim countries. It is prevalent among all religious groups in many parts of Africa and Western Asia, whether they are Coptic Christians, Ethiopian Jews, or Arab Muslims. Female genital cutting or—more to the point—female genital mutilation (FGM), generally referred to as circumcision, occurs in at least five different forms. Circumcision is essentially a powerful bodily sign of the human—male and female—covenant with God. In the Quran it is reaffirmed in sura al-Nahl and quoted as example in the fatwas endorsing circumcision. It seems to be true that men are hardly involved in the actual decision in favour of female genital cutting. A man should not interfere in the decision of women to be circumcised. It is practiced and transmitted among women and midwives. Only sometimes is a (male or female) physician involved. On the basis of Islamic normativity, mirrored in fatwas, this paper aims to examine a very ambivalent approach concerning female genital mutilation.
Section
Articles

Published

2011-01-01

How to Cite

Kutscher, J. (2011). Towards a solution concerning female genital mutilation? An approach from within according to Islamic legal opinions. Scripta Instituti Donneriani Aboensis, 23, 216–236. https://doi.org/10.30674/scripta.67389