Global Times

Dangerous route to manhood

S. Africa circumcisi­on rituals can lead to amputation, death

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Naked, covered in white clay mud, and with his penis wrapped in leaves, Abongile Maqegu, 20, sits in a hut in South Africa recovering from his circumcisi­on – a traditiona­l ritual that can prove fatal.

For Maqegu, it has been a grueling initiation test that marks his arrival as an adult, and the pain is an essential part of the experience.

“You must go through that pain to show that you are a man,” he told AFP outside the coastal village of Coffee Bay about 100 kilometers from Umtata in Eastern Cape province.

“We don’t even think of ( getting) a medical circumcisi­on because it is the easy way out. We laugh at those who go to hospitals.”

Maqegu is one of thousands of youths from the Xhosa ethnic group attending this year’s annual winter initiation schools across Eastern Cape province.

After his foreskin is cut off by a tribal elder using a knife, he is kept in the small thatched rondavel hut with two other initiates for up to four weeks, with a “bush doctor” present at all times monitoring their wounds.

The initiates are allowed no contact with women, and spend their time playing cards, applying mud and stoking the smoky fire to try to keep warm.

“If you go to hospital you are weak, you are not a man. Your wound must not be treated with Betadine ( disinfecta­nt),” Maqegu said.

“There is special traditiona­l medicine for that and it heals fast.”

Secretive ceremony

He revealed tree leaves tied like a bandage around his genitals, which are also covered in a traditiona­l healing ointment and held to one side by string.

The ritual is revered and guarded by the Xhosa people, but the unhygienic conditions – and abuse by some initiation schools – exacts a heavy toll.

At least 11 youths have already died during this southern hemisphere winter in Eastern Cape, according to provincial officials, while the government says several hundred have died nationwide in initiation schools since 1995.

Often the cause is infection from a botched circumcisi­on, which can lead to penis amputation surgery.

Circumcisi­on has also been demonstrat­ed to be a powerful weapon in the fight against HIV, by helping to protect men from the AIDS virus.

But specialist­s – meeting in Paris from Sunday for a four- day forum on HIV/ AIDS – remain worried about botched operations and poor hygiene.

Other risks include dehydratio­n or maltreatme­nt by initiation leaders, who conduct the secretive circumcisi­on rituals deep in the mountains.

‘ Recognized as a man’

In another grass- thatched hut, 200 meters away, sitting on a reed mat, is 20- year- old Fezikhaya Tselane, who has just returned from his circumcisi­on rites in the remote bush.

As he nurses the sore wound, his bush doctor sits close by, surrounded by dirty pots, plates and empty beer bottles strewn over the floor.

“I have been waiting for this day. All my brothers have gone through this process,” Tselane told AFP, entirely covered in white mud, which is meant to ward off evil spirits as well as preserve body warmth.

“In our Xhosa culture, if you don’t go through traditiona­l circumcisi­on you are not recognized as a man.

“Now I can marry, have my own house and kids and not depend on my parents.”

Mxolisi Dimaza, chairman of the Eastern Cape provincial health committee, said authoritie­s were determined to curb injuries and deaths in the initiation schools.

“This year a considerab­le amount of resources were made available so that we do not experience many more deaths,” he told AFP after his recent field visit to several initiation sites.

“However, there are still problem areas where we have illegal initiation schools. These are where the school itself is not registered and the initiates are often below 18 years old.”

The province has hired 35 4x4 vehicles to patrol initiation practices in a region of steep hills, dirt roads and rough tracks.

It has also passed a law setting out a minimum age of 18, and establishi­ng a registry of accredited bush doctors and schools. From the age of 16, boys can be circumcise­d with their parents’ permission.

Medical risks

Dimaza appealed for any initiates suffering from infections or ill- health to go immediatel­y to hospital, adding that parents should not feel social pressure for their children to have traditiona­l circumcisi­ons.

“It is our culture – but if the parents want their child to have it medically, we don’t object,” he said.

The tradition has become tainted in recent years by commercial­ization, with some bush doctors charging large amounts of money, while some initiates have been found to be as young as 13.

Initiation ceremonies have also spread to other provinces such as KwaZulu Natal and Mpumalanga, boosted in part by UN- backed informatio­n that male circumcisi­on reduces the risk of heterosexu­ally- acquired HIV infection by 60 percent.

For one bush doctor, proper care should mean that initiates are able to experience the ritual in a safe and deeply spiritual manner.

“You have to be careful and take good care, otherwise the wound gets septic,” said Lukholo Marhenene, 21, who has been nursing initiates for three years.

“You must change the leaves often and keep the wound clean and dry,” said Marhenene.

“During the month I will be attending to him, he stays in the hut. Only his father and other boys who have already gone through initiation are allowed to visit.

“After two weeks, we slaughter a goat to appease the spirits.”

 ??  ?? Initiates in a village in South Africa’s Eastern Cape province wait to be circumcise­d. Some boys die or completely lose their manhood due to the lack of proper treatment.
Initiates in a village in South Africa’s Eastern Cape province wait to be circumcise­d. Some boys die or completely lose their manhood due to the lack of proper treatment.

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