Ngakunya sih islam ngehormati dan ngehargai cewek melebihi agama lain, hehehe...
Makin keras kaing2nya, makin baik, bukan prakteknya, tp kaing2nya. Itulah prinsip Islam >________________________________ > From: Bukan Pedanda <[email protected]> >To: [email protected] >Sent: Sunday, May 20, 2012 2:00 AM >Subject: [proletar] France24: Egyptians debate 'traumatizing tradition' of >female circumcision > > > > > >Agama najis Islam itu merendahkan, menghina dan menindas perempuan... > >Nabi babi M%uhamed diriwayatkan bilang perempuan itu tidak cerdas.. > >Kesaksian perempuan cuman dihargai separuh kesaksian laki-laki.. > >Perempuan juga nggak boleh jadi imam sembahyang kalau di jemaah ada laki-laki >dewasa.. > >Mukmin disuruh memperlakukan istrinya seperti ladang yang bisa dimasukinya >tiap saat. > >Jadi bukan sebagai manusia. > >Dan mukmin diperintahkan memukul istrinya yang bandel. > >Udah gitu itilnya boleh dipotong hingga banyak perempuan yang tidak bisa >menikmati ngentot dan sering susah mencapai orgasme. > >Jelasnya, di dunia Islam hakekatnya perempuan itu cuma sekedar lobang buat >dientotin laki-laki. > >Dan di akhairat? > >Penghuni neraka juga banyakan terdiri dari perempuan. > >Dan perempuan yang masuk sorga juga cuma bisa melongo abadi, karena disaingi >72 bidadari yang perawan abadi. > >Islam itu, saya bilagn dan saya ulang adalah agama nanjis yang seyogiyanya >lekas-lekas dicampakkan dari Indonesia. > >http://observers.france24.com/content/20120518-egyptians-debate-female-circumcision-religion-tradition-female-genital-mutilation-FGM-parliament-law-ban > >Egyptians debate 'traumatizing tradition' of female circumcision >By Nourhan Refaat / Hussein Gohar on 18/05/2012 - 11:58 > >Image courtesy of Aktion Mensch. > >In Egypt, female circumcision, also known as female genital mutilation, was >outlawed five years ago after a 12-year-old girl bled to death. However, this >ban has done little to stop the widespread practice, and some conservative >lawmakers are now pushing to make it legal again, to the despair of those >fighting the centuries-old tradition. > >Over 90 percent of all women of child-bearing age in Egypt have undergone >female genital mutilation, or FGM, according to the 2008 Egypt Demographic and >Health Survey. And despite educational campaigns, girls between 15 and 17 who >underwent FGM only dropped from 77 percent to 74 percent between 2005 and >2008. In Egypt, FGM generally entails removing part of or the entire clitoris; >in some cases, the labia may be removed, too. The procedure can take place >anytime from infancy to early adolescence. > >The revolution has not made matters easier for anti-FGM campaigners. >Two-thirds of Egypt's lower house of parliament is now controlled by Islamic >parties, including the Muslim Brotherhood and the more hardline Salafis. >Earlier this week, MP Nasser al-Shaker, of the Salafi-led Nour Party, defended >FGM on a morning television show, arguing that it was mandated by Islam. He >also pointed to former first lady Suzanne Mubarak's efforts to eradicate the >practice as all the more reason to repeal the ban. His comments immediately >drew the ire of women's rights groups. > >A few weeks ago, a female member of parliament, Azza al-Garf, also called for >the FGM ban to be repealed. Al-Garf is a member of the Freedom and Justice >Party, the Muslim Brotherhood's political branch. She too was chastised by >women's rights groups, one of which is now trying to sue her. > >These controversies come on the heels of reports that the Muslim Brotherhood >allegedly organised mobile caravans offering medical treatment – including >female circumcision – in the region of Minya, in Upper Egypt. FRANCE 24 could >not independently verify the veracity of these reports. The Muslim Brotherhood >has denied this ever took place and stated that their organisation is >officially against FGM. > >The Muslim Brotherhood commented on the FGM debate on its official >English-language Twitter account. >"During the Egyptian revolution, we changed a whole political system, but >deep-rooted beliefs are harder to change" >Nourhan Refaat, 22, lives in Cairo, where she works as a social media >consultant. She is one of the hundreds who have signed a petition against >female genital mutilation, addressed to the Egyptian parliament. > >I was really shocked when I heard the news that members of parliament were >calling for making FGM legal again, especially in the case of the woman MP. It >is heartbreaking to see that politicians are still having such conversations >today; it feels like Egypt is stagnating, and maybe even moving backwards, >instead of moving forward. > >FGM is not a religious practice – it's just a traditional one. Unfortunately, >some members of the Muslim Brotherhood and Salafis lacking religious knowledge >try to make people think this practice is dictated by Islam, when many serious >religious scholars agree that it is not, and it is not practiced in most >Muslim countries. In fact, in Egypt, it is practiced by both Muslims and >Christians. > >Younger Egyptians in their 20s and 30s, who are in the upper-middle class and >educated, are completely against FGM. Personally, I've never met someone my >age who is in favour of it. We speak freely about it, thanks to TV campaigns >aired in the early 2000s that raised awareness of the issue and taught us to >think about it critically. However, for the older generation, my parents' >generation, only a small fraction of them are against the idea. (Thankfully, >my parents were among those.) Even well-educated people in the older >generation did this to their daughters, because they thought that even if it >was painful, it was better than taking the risk that their daughters might >become sexually promiscuous before marriage. > >"It's the basic right of every woman, when she gets married, to enjoy her >sexual relationship" > >Of course, that's ridiculous. The effects of FGM last a lifetime. I believe >it's the basic right of every woman, when she gets married, to enjoy her >sexual relationship. > >Even though young people speak freely about their dislike of this tradition, >women who have been circumcised don't admit it. That's just too personal, and >for some of them just too traumatic. > >During the Egyptian revolution, we changed a whole political system, but >deep-rooted beliefs are harder to change. I think it might take another >generation before the practice is eradicated - that is, if extremists don't >gain more power and make our country slip backwards. >"The circumcision ban is totally ineffective" >Dr. Hussein Gohar is a gynaecologist. He heads the Gohar Women's Health Center >in Cairo. > >I would probably put the percentage of circumcised women in Egypt well above >90 percent. However, because my clinic is in Cairo, where I deal mostly with >upper-middle class women, much, much fewer of my clients are circumcised. >Those who are, they're usually from the older generation. Outside big cities, >the practice is still rampant today. > >Unfortunately, the circumcision ban is totally ineffective. Many doctors >throughout the country continue to circumcise girls in private clinics, behind >closed doors. By law, they're supposed to report parents who do this to their >daughters, but if they believe in it too, why would they report it? They only >report it in cases were the procedure goes seriously wrong, and then they have >no choice. > >I was in a debate with an advocate of female circumcision on Egyptian >television a while back. I told him, `If you want to cut off a girl's >clitoris, you should do the equivalent, and chop off your penis.' In reality, >removing any part of the genital system doesn't decrease desire, as those who >support the practice so often argue – if you cut off your tongue, you'd still >like some soup, you just wouldn't be able to eat it. > >"Even if they heal well, these girls are in for a lifetime of sexual >dysfunction" > >Female circumcision brings with it serious psychological trauma. It's very >painful, and because the clitoris is close to an artery, it is possible to >bleed to death. I've also treated women who develop cysts because of it. But >even if they heal well, these girls are in for a lifetime of sexual >dysfunction. > >Of course I'm worried that government representatives are even considering >rolling back the ban, but the truth is that ban or no ban, I don't think the >law makes any difference. This fight will take place in villages, not in >parliament. What's really needed is much, much more education. And not just >education on the part of activist, urban youth, who are preaching to the >choir, or from secular doctors like me, but from religious organisations – >moderate Muslims – who can explain to those who believe this is a religious >practice that it is in fact just a tradition, a dangerous tradition that must >end. Religious groups need to step up their game. >Source URL: >http://observers.france24.com/content/20120518-egyptians-debate-female-circumcision-religion-tradition-female-genital-mutilation-FGM-parliament-law-ban > >Links: >[1] http://www.aktion-mensch.de/ >[2] http://www.who.int/mediacentre/factsheets/fs241/en/ >[3] http://www.measuredhs.com/pubs/pdf/fr220/fr220.pdf >[4] >http://www.egyptindependent.com/news/salafi-mp-advocates-female-circumcision-says-suzanne-mubarak-banned-it-news-1 >[5] >http://www.desertflowerfoundation.org/en/egypt-women's-ngo-takes-pro-fgm-parliamentarian-to-court/ >[6] http://www.alarabiya.net/articles/2012/05/15/214245.html >[7] http://www.ikhwanweb.com/article.php?id=29981&utm_medium=twitter >[8] >http://observers.france24.com/content/20120518-egyptians-debate-female-circumcision-religion-tradition-female-genital-mutilation-FGM-parliament-law-ban >[9] http://observers.france24.com/content/tweet-oppose >[10] http://observers.france24.com/content/tweet-priority >[11] http://observers.france24.com/profile/222044 >[12] http://www.gopetition.com/petitions/no-to-fgm-in-egypt.html >[13] http://www.who.int/reproductivehealth/topics/fgm/prevalence/en/index.html >[14] http://observers.france24.com/profile/222083 > > > > > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] ------------------------------------ Post message: [email protected] Subscribe : [email protected] Unsubscribe : [email protected] List owner : [email protected] Homepage : http://proletar.8m.com/Yahoo! 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