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Female Genital Mutilation Within The United States

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Female Genital Mutilation is a practice in which external portions of female genitalia are removed for non-medical, cultural reasons. In many countries and cultures, young girls are forced to go through this procedure before getting married, based on the belief that the practice will keep them pure and virgins. This practice, set in place by a patriarchal hegemonic system, controls and decides the lives of any girls in a lot of places. Often times, these lives are ended because the practice is non-medical, not safe, and definitely not even done the right way. In 1994 a woman named Fauziya Kissindja applied for asylum in the United States on the basis of persecution back in her home, Togo. Kissindja fled her country after her aunt, (her current “legal” guardian) was forcing her into a polygamous marriage, and go through female genital mutilation as decided by her tribe laws. Fauziya was able to not go through FGM at the age of fifteen because her father (now deceased), protected her from the procedure at the time. With the help of her older sister and her mother, Fauziya was able to flee from Togo to Ghana; escaped Ghana because she thought her aunt and her husband would catch her there, and went to Germany. A German woman took her in for a few months, until one day she met a Nigerian man who sold her his sister’s British passport and advised her to ask for asylum in the United States. Upon arriving in the U.S., Fauziya went straight to the Immigration and

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