FEMALE GENITAL MUTILATION & 

FORCED EARLY MARRIAGE

According to the World Health Organization (WHO), female genital mutilation (FGM) or cutting comprises all surgical procedures and involves partial or total removal of the external genitalia or other injuries to the female genitalia organs for cultural or non-therapeutic reasons. The brutality is graphically documented and the excision is normally done under secrecy to girls aged 5 to 18 in unhygienic conditions using crude instruments... a knife, broken glass, razor blade, or any sharp cutting item. Sterilization and anesthesia are seldom used. Pain, injury to adjacent tissue, severe bleeding, infection, acute urine retention, fractures (due to a struggling girl being restrained), fever, potential HIV infection, and possible infertility occur. In some cases the result is death. The WHO also states FGM increases the risk of stillbirth, cerebral palsy, and epilepsy due to the difficulty in childbirth delivery. The results are often severe and heartrending.


In the Maasai culture, forced early marriage (FEM) occurs immediately following cutting, many times to an older man as a second or third wife. The girls are sold for a dowry of cows or goats often at a very young age. They typically leave their home for an empty marriage and a life of slavery. Their education is ended. Understandably, girls are running away to escape this demeaning and cruel process which leads to physical and psychological damage.


Social implications are also severe for community and national development. The ability of girls who have undergone FGM and FEM to contribute to the community is extremely limited. Married off at an early age, these girls live a life of gender discrimination and inequalities with little or no participation in family, community, or national decision making. They do not even participate in deciding when or to whom they marry.  


For more information, watch the videos below. 

WARNING: The videos contain mature content and are not recommended for younger audiences. Parental guidance is recommended.

giving safety

Giving Safety, Hope, and Education to Young Kenyan Girls

Sep 26, 2021
In villages of Kenya, Female Genital Mutilation, a centuries-old tradition and cruel ritual involving removal of female genitalia or injury to genital organs, is still being followed Over 23% percent of Kenyan girls are forced into marriage before they even turn eighteen (UNICEF) We believe every child should have a place to feel safe, be loved, and have the opportunity to reach their full potential Help Kenyan Schools of Hope Give Safety, Give Hope, and Give Education to young girls fleeing female genital mutilation and forced early marriage You can touch the life of a girl to change it forever and impact generations to come! Donate or Sponsor a Girl Today at www.kenyanschoolsofhope.org “The world will not be destroyed by those who do evil, but by those who watch them without doing anything” – Albert Einstein

Maasai daughters


Video contains mature content and is not recommended for younger audiences. Parental guidance is recommended.

Maasai Daughters

Aug 11, 2015
Maasai Daughters is a documentary about the lives of three girls and the women who rescued them from retrogressive cultural practices in their own Maasai community at the AIC Girls School and Rescue Center in Kajiado, Kenya. It is an intimate portrait of these women as they sacrifice everything to make a stand against female genital mutilation and early forced marriage happening within their own culture.

I will never be cut

Video contains mature content and is not recommended for younger audiences. Parental guidance is recommended.

'I will never be cut': Kenyan girls fight back against genital mutilation | Guardian Investigations

Apr 18, 2011
'I will never be cut': Kenyan girls fight back against genital mutilation SUBSCRIBE: http://bit.ly/WHumqY Nancy is a Kenyan girl about to face a brutal passage to womanhood. Narrated by Angela Griffin. This video is one of a series of investigative documentaries about poverty, commissioned and editorially controlled by Guardian Films, produced in association with Christian Aid. Go to http://www.guardian.co.uk/poverty-over for more details. For more news from the Guardian: http://bit.ly/YCr2N8