Separated at birth.When Cheryl Chase was born, doctors told her parents she was a boy. Eighteen months later, after judging her genital appendage appendage /ap·pen·dage/ (ah-pen´dij) a subordinate portion of a structure, or an outgrowth, such as a tail. epiploic appendages see under appendix . inadequate as a penis, a different set of medical experts performed a clitoridectomy clitoridectomy /clit·o·ri·dec·to·my/ (klit?ah-ri-dek´tah-me) excision of the clitoris. clit·o·ri·dec·to·my n. Excision of the clitoris. on Chase and told her parents to raise her as a girl. "This sort of genital mutilation scars people for life and takes away almost all normal sexual sensation," says Chase, the 41-year-old director of the Intersex Society of North America The Intersex Society of North America, founded in 1993 by Cheryl Chase, is an organisation formed to represent the interest of intersexuals in the USA: people whose bodies do not fit the accepted conventional ideas of "male" or "female". . "My clitoris clitoris /clit·o·ris/ (klit´ah-ris) the small, elongated, erectile body in the female, situated at the anterior angle of the rima pudendi and homologous with the penis in the male. clit·o·ris n. was removed because someone decided that I'd be unhappy as a male with a small penis or as a woman with a giant clitoris. So they cut off part of my body. " After years of silence intersexes -- those born with genitalia genitalia /gen·i·ta·lia/ (jen?i-tal´e-ah) [L.] the reproductive organs. ambiguous genitalia that fall somewhere between male and female -- are organizing against medical professionals who they claim are performing unnecessary surgery on children with ambiguous or unusual genitalia. Intersexual in·ter·sex·u·al adj. Having both male and female characteristics, including in varying degrees reproductive organs and secondary sexual characteristics, as a result of an abnormality of the sex chromosomes or a hormonal imbalance during embryogenesis. activists have been attending national gay roundtables, and groups with names like Hermaphrodites Hermaphrodites half-man, half-woman; offspring of Hermes and Aphrodite. [Gk. Myth.: Hall, 153] See : Androgyny With Attitude and Transexual Noun 1. transexual - a person who has undergone a sex change operation transsexual unusual person, anomaly - a person who is unusual 2. transexual - a person whose sexual identification is entirely with the opposite sex transsexual Menace have targeted physicians who advocate and perform these surgeries. Articles in Newsweek and The New York Times and segments on Dateline NBC and ABC's PrimeTime Live have given the issue of intersexuality intersexuality /in·ter·sex·u·al·i·ty/ (in?ter-sek?shoo-al´i-te) 1. hermaphroditism. 2. pseudohermaphroditism. 3. androgyny. a higher profile, and many gay rights groups have begun to acknowledge the correlation between these surgeries and homophobia. "The underlying principle with these surgeries is to make sure every kid possible gets to grow up to be heterosexual," says Riki Wilchins, executive director of the New York City-based Gender Public Advocacy Coalition. "Doctors will tell you if they cut away at the child's genitalia, it can function normally. What they mean is that the kid can function as a normal heterosexual child." Wilchins contends that parents can learn to love a child who is physically different, but some medical professionals disagree. "Parents want a girl or a boy, not an it," says former U.S. surgeon general Joycelyn Elders, an outspoken proponent of gender-assignment surgery. "These activists will tell you that I advocate genital mutilation. I don't. I support the treatment of children with correct sex identification via medication or surgery. I give the parents as much information as I can and help them decide. " Chase and other activists have targeted Elders, whose recent public appearances have been leafleted by ISNA Isna (ĭs`nə) or Esna (ĕs`–), town (1986 pop. 43,055), central Egypt, on the Nile River. It is the center for an agricultural area that is irrigated by the Nile. members. When Elders addressed the Mautner Project for Lesbians With Cancer fund-raiser in Washington, D.C., September 20, intersexual activists handed out fliers saying that Elders supports intersex intersex /in·ter·sex/ (in´ter-seks) 1. hermaphrodite. 2. pseudohermaphrodite. 3. intersexuality. female intersex a female pseudohermaphrodite. genital mutilation. Chase says her group has attempted, unsuccessfully, to discuss the issue with Elders in person. Elders, who claims she was unaware of a demonstration at the Mautner fund-raiser, is not alone in her beliefs. Kenneth Glassberg, director of pediatric urology at the State University of New York (body) State University of New York - (SUNY) The public university system of New York State, USA, with campuses throughout the state. Health Science Center at Brooklyn, believes that "letting an individual decide his or her own sex, when older, is too great a burden. Teenagers already have enough difficulty figuring out who they are; we don't want them to have to decide which gender they are. "Intersex surgeries have changed over the past 25 years," Glassberg continues. "Adults who are objecting to the treatment of intersexual disorders are basing their opinions on surgeries performed many years ago. In the rare case of an intersexual adult's not being able to identify with the sex he or she was assigned, in most cases the patient was n t taking his or her prescribed medications -- medications that must be taken for life." Angela Moreno, a 25-year-old whose clitoris was amputated when she was 12, says she's heard it all before Heard It All Before was released by Jamie Cullum when he was without a record deal and copies are now highly sought after. Track listing
Stories like Moreno's have affected the way some doctors perceive the need for intersexual surgery. Charmian Quigley, a pediatric pediatric /pe·di·at·ric/ (pe?de-at´rik) pertaining to the health of children. pe·di·at·ric adj. Of or relating to pediatrics. endocrinologist at Indiana University, says she's changed her position on the treatment of intersexuality after listening to people who as children had their genitalia surgically altered. "Now I'm less likely to refer a patient for the typical surgical repair," she says. "We shouldn't take away tissue we can't replace and do things that can't be undone. " Children should be labeled with a sex says Chase, but that label should not be surgically enforced. "Labeling a child a girl does not require a clitoridectomy," she says. Elders, who has been quoted as saying, "I can't make a good boy, but I can make a pretty good girl," believes a child isn't equipped to make such a decision. Glassberg agrees: "There are rare mistakes in gender assignment. For the most part we are making the correct gender assignment and reconstructing genitalia in infancy so that cosmetically they appear as normal boys or girls and can function satisfactorily as adults in the gender assigned." Not so, according to Chase. "We don't try to alleviate the social ill of racism by forcing everyone to be white by lightening their skin at birth," she says. "But it's current medical policy to inflict mental and physical harm on anyone who is born differently gendered." It's all about homophobia, says Chase, who points to statistics showing that intersexual children are more likely to grow up gay than a child born with unambiguous genitalia. "Doctors forward the belief that a child sent home from the hospital with a giant clitoris can't be loved or might turn out to be homosexual," she says. "Parents are told that performing genital surgery will ensure that their child grows up heterosexual. But all it ensures is that we'll grow up scarred and ashamed of who we are." |
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