|  Roundtable on the Elimination of Female Genital  
  Mutilation Remarks by First Lady Hillary Rodham Clinton
 Dakar, Senegal
 April 2, 1998
    
  Let me start by thanking all of you who are here this morning. And I want  
  to thank, first of all, the minister and I particularly want to thank the minister  
  for her work on this issue and many others. And I want the minister to convey  
  to the president what an example he is for not just Senegal and Africa but the  
  entire world with the stand he has taken. 
 I also want to thank our representative from Mali. We know that the issue of  
  FGM in Mali is a very serious one, and I want to thank you for bringing to our  
  attention the statistics and the work that you are doing in Mali. And I know  
  that you will have the support and solidarity of women, not only in Senegal  
  and Africa, but around the world, for your work. I want to thank our moderator  
  for her excellent job and honor the work that she has done. And I want to thank  
  Molly Melching for the work that TOSTAN and that she personally has done on  
  this issue and so many others. 
 But mostly, I want to thank the great women and men who are here today. The  
  work that you have done in Malicounda is an example that will stand as a model  
  for all time and all people. I hope you understand how important your work is  
  not only to your families and your girls but to girls all over Senegal, Mali,  
  Africa  everywhere where custom and tradition in any way poses a danger  
  to girls' health. 
 And in your skit I saw how difficult this has been. It was not easy for women  
  and men to come together to stand against and speak out against a very ancient  
  custom. And as we saw in the skit, even sometimes mothers who did not want their  
  girls to be circumcised felt like they had to because of this ancient custom.  
  And as we heard, the circumcisers often themselves felt they had to continue  
  the custom because it made them a living. So you had many obstacles to face  
  when you began your struggle to bring to everyone's attention all of the  
  difficulties, the pain, the hemorrhaging, the suffering, even the deaths associated  
  with female circumcision. 
 This is not only a very wonderful example of what you have done on this issue.  
  This is an example of how democracy works; how women's voices, combined  
  with some very brave men's voices, can be heard. It is also an example,  
  as we heard, of how you can make it clear to people that there is no religious  
  basis for this custom, that the Koran does not say anything about this, and  
  that Islam does not support this. And I appreciate very much the message to  
  that effect. 
 The courage and commitment of the women, the men, and the religious leaders  
  of Malicounda has served now as an example to bring together thousands and thousands  
  of other Senegalese. So you have started a great movement. And I hope that this  
  movement, along with the very strong statement of the president and the work  
  of the minister, will end FGM in Senegal. And that Senegal will then be an example,  
  because of your leadership, to Mali, to Egypt, to every other country and every  
  other family and every other village because they can say, If the people  
  of Malicounda can do it, we can do it. And our girls are healthier, they  
  are happier, and the men and the women are working together, and we should be  
  able to do this as well. 
 I have written about what you have accomplished. I have written about it in  
  a newspaper column that will go all over the world because I want the world  
  to know about the men and the women and the religious leaders of Malicounda  
  and what you have done for your girls. You have changed history. You have done  
  something so very important, and I am honored  honored  to be with  
  you. I feel a great sense of pride and honor as I look at you because I know  
  that you have accomplished  more than anything else  you have created  
  a new future for the girls and the boys. 
 Because, after all, the girls become the mothers, and the mothers must give  
  birth to healthy children and be able to raise those children for the village  
  to continue, and you have made that much more possible than it used to be. So  
  I thank you. I thank you for your work. I thank you for your leadership. And  
  I thank you for making this long journey early in the morning with your babies  
  to come here to be with all of us. And I want the rest of us to applaud the  
  people of Malicounda. 
 I am just very proud to be with these extremely brave and courageous leaders  
  of change. 
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