Mail & Guardian

Happiness is restored manhood

To understand the miracle of correcting a botched circumcisi­on, just speak to one of the survivors

- Carl Collison

Eight years of “a lot, a lot of pains” behind him, Nelson Gentsana is happy. “I can pee like any other man now,” the 23-year-old said. Gentsana was the victim of a botched circumcisi­on at an inititatio­n school in the Eastern Cape in 2010.

Speaking to the Mail & Guardian in 2017 for a report on botched circumcisi­ons at initiation schools, Gentsana recalled the “five or six months” he subsequent­ly spent in hospital. “I was in severe pain. So much pain. I couldn’t feel my right leg. I couldn’t walk. Emotionall­y, I didn’t feel like a human being. I didn’t feel anything. Nothing at all.”

At the age of 16, he had to adapt to life “without my manhood” and having to use a catheter to urinate.

His parents are dead and he lives in the Eastern Cape town of Lusikisiki with his brother and sister, both of whom were unemployed.

“If we had something to offer him — some money to take him to hospital and get back his manhood — we would. But we struggle a lot for money. A lot,” said Gentsana’s uncle.

After the M&G report, Gentsana was identified as one of the province’s “high priority” botched circumcisi­on survivors in need of reconstruc­tive surgery.

“I was very grateful,” said Gentsana. “But I was nervous. Too much nervous.”

The operations, which would ordinarily cost between R150000 and R200 000 each, are done by a partnershi­p between Nelson Mandela Academic Hospital and a Pretoriaba­sed urologist, Dr Raymond Campbell. The Man and Boy Foundation identifies men in need of surgery.

Campbell said the programme has been running for 18 months and, to date, has successful­ly operated on 25 young men.

But James Porter, a doctor at the Madwaleni Hospital in the Eastern Cape’s Mbashe district, said his hospital alone admitted an average of 10 boys weekly during the height of an initiation season, mostly for dehydratio­n and septic wounds.

With initiation season approachin­g, there will probably be more young men in need of reconstruc­tive surgery.

In November last year, the Commission for the Protection and Promotion of the Rights of Cultural, Religious and Linguistic Communitie­s released its report on the problems that lead to deaths and injuries at initiation schools. It found that the majority of initiates (79%) are in the Eastern Cape, where traditiona­l initiation practices are favoured (63% of initiates) over hospital circumcisi­ons (13%).

“What is striking is that only 17% of initiates understood the risks associated with traditiona­l circumcisi­on without being seen by a doctor, while 67% did not have a clue about these risks,” it said.

The commission’s investigat­ion was undertaken in response to a “crisis threatenin­g a cultural practice that has been conducted in African societies in South Africa and elsewhere from time immemorial”.

“The recent problems — deaths, amputation­s, injuries, gangsters — occurring in male initiation schools have resulted in negative perception­s of the practice; perception­s which find expression in criticism directed at the initiation schools, especially that they represent an outdated cultural practice. Furthermor­e, the initiation schools are seen by many as death traps for young people,” the commission’s chairperso­n, Thoko Mkhwanazi-Xaluva, said.

Speaking at a press briefing when the report was released, she said the majority of initiation schools “run without incidents”.

But the report said that the number of hospital admissions, deaths, injuries and penile amputation­s during initiation seasons could no longer be ignored.

“The crisis — as it should be declared — warrants urgent attention by all South Africans concerned,” said the report.

“I always say, once there is a mortuary van and an ambulance, culture is no longer there. Culture collapses at that point and it is just a crime,” Mkhwanazi-Xaluva said at the media briefing.

Since 2013, in a house in Lusikisiki, Gugulethu Sirayi has been counsellin­g survivors of botched circumcisi­ons. With little in the way of funding, he transports, feeds and counsels the young men for these monthly sessions using the little money he earns as a constructi­on worker. The suicide rate is high among these young men.

Sirayi said: “I just try and give them hope. So many of them think they’re nothing because they have lost their manhood.”

Witnessing the success of Gentsana’s operation, he said, made him “very, very happy”.

Campbell does these operations on a pro-bono basis and said “it is one of the most satisfying things I have undertaken as a doctor”.

“With the boys we operate on, the stories are all really terrible. They are really in such a broken state. There is a real sense of hopelessne­ss.”

Mkhwanazi-Xaluva said that, when the commission’s investigat­ing team spoke to survivors of botched circumcisi­ons, it became clear that “[they experience] trauma, trauma, trauma … every day of their lives”.

Having experience­d that first-hand, Gentsana said: “Those people who do these things to us, they must look after the boys [in their care]. I experience­d those difficulti­es. I don’t want anyone to go through that. Nobody should go through that thing.”

Nearly a decade after his ill-fated attendance at an initiation school, and a little more than a month after the surgery he had hoped for for so long was finally completed, Gentsana said he was “still feeling a little bit of pain”.

But, he added: “I think it’s because I wasn’t using [my penis] for eight years. I’m still adjusting, but I am happy. I’m very much happy.”

“I just try and give them hope. So many of them think they’re nothing because they have lost their manhood”

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