WhatsApp почетна страницаWhatsApp почетна страницаWeSpeakOut
WHATSAPP ЗА ПРЕЛИСТУВАЧ
ФУНКЦИИ
ПРЕЗЕМИ
БЕЗБЕДНОСТ
ЦЕНТАР ЗА ПОМОШ

Избери јазик

  • azərbaycan

  • Afrikaans

  • Bahasa Indonesia

  • Melayu

  • català

  • čeština

  • dansk

  • Deutsch

  • eesti

  • English

  • español

  • français

  • Gaeilge

  • hrvatski

  • italiano

  • Kiswahili

  • latviešu

  • lietuvių

  • magyar

  • Nederlands

  • norsk bokmål

  • o‘zbek

  • Filipino

  • polski

  • Português (Brasil)

  • Português (Portugal)

  • română

  • shqip

  • slovenčina

  • slovenščina

  • suomi

  • svenska

  • Tiếng Việt

  • Türkçe

  • Ελληνικά

  • български

  • қазақ тілі

  • македонски

  • русский

  • српски

  • українська

  • עברית

  • العربية

  • فارسی

  • اردو

  • বাংলা

  • हिन्दी

  • ગુજરાતી

  • ಕನ್ನಡ

  • मराठी

  • ਪੰਜਾਬੀ

  • தமிழ்

  • తెలుగు

  • മലയാളം

  • ไทย

  • 简体中文

  • 繁體中文(台灣)

  • 繁體中文(香港)

  • 日本語

  • 한국어

  • Симни

  • Опции

  • Безбедност

  • Центар за помош

  • Стапи во контакт

  • Доживувања со WhatsApp

  • Доживувањата на луѓето

  • Доживувањата на луѓето од Индија


WeSpeakOut


In India's tight-knit Bohra Muslim community, Female Genital Mutilation (FGM), or khafz, is a common practice. Girls as young as seven undergo the procedure — said to dull female sexual desire — in secret.

Khafz affects an estimated one million Indian women and girls, and those who oppose the practice are often shunned by their community. This fear has silenced many in the past but 51-year-old Masooma Ranalvi is challenging the status quo.

It all started in 2015 when Masooma and her sisters were coming to terms with their own khafz experiences. Though close, the three had never discussed it before. Convinced that she must speak publicly about the issue, Masooma blogged about it and to her surprise, her inbox was flooded with emails of support.

This WhatsApp group emerged as a safe and private space for all of them.

Masooma then started the "WeSpeakOut against FGM" WhatsApp group with her sisters and two other women. Within 10 days, there were 50 members from India and across the world sharing their own khafz stories. This WhatsApp group emerged as a safe and private space for all of them.

"Membership to this group has been a liberating experience," says Masooma. "We were across time zones, but all from one community. We were all survivors."

Today, WeSpeakOut is an organization that reaches thousands of people within the Bohra Muslim community, sparking dialogue and conversations through shareable WhatsApp messages, information on its own website and other social media platforms, and community engagement activities. As a direct result, more than 180,000 people have signed an online petition challenging the practice and at least 1,000 stories about khafz have been published by national and international media outlets.

Standing up to an entrenched, centuries-old practice, and rallying others to do the same, is not easy. WeSpeakOut is putting names and voices to khafz and empowering a new generation of women with information about a life-altering practice.


Повеќе искуства од India

Истражувај повеќе
  • Radha Kishan Soni

    Radha Kishan Soni

    Индија

WHATSAPP

Опции

Безбедност

Симни

WhatsApp Web

Бизнис

Приватност

КОМПАНИЈА

Инфо

Кариери

Бренд центар

Стапи во контакт

Блог

WhatsApp искуства

ПРЕЗЕМИ

Mac/PC

Android

iPhone

ПОМОШ

Центар за помош

Twitter

Facebook

Корона вирус

2022 © WhatsApp LLC

Приватност и Услови