 
ABOUT THE PROJECT
      
            "My Body Belongs to Me" is a project launched in 2019 to combat Female Genital Mutilation. This project works to change cultures and heritages that lead to the continuation of violence against girls and women in Egyptian communities through documentation, questionnaires and research.
As an outcome of this project, an awareness booklet was produced with proposing questions and answers on circumcision and methods of reporting circumcision, along with a quantitative research paper on the proportions of circumcision and types in El-Bahira governorate. This booklet also highlights the conditions and types of violence occurring to women in El-Bahira governorate.
      
  As an outcome of this project, an awareness booklet was produced with proposing questions and answers on circumcision and methods of reporting circumcision, along with a quantitative research paper on the proportions of circumcision and types in El-Bahira governorate. This booklet also highlights the conditions and types of violence occurring to women in El-Bahira governorate.
Multimedia Gallery
              Image
              My Body Belongs to Me
      
            This project was launched in 2019 to combat Female Genital Mutilation. It works to change cultures and heritages that lead to the continuation of violence against girls and women in Egyptian communities.
      
  Image
              My Body Belongs to Me
      
            This project was launched in 2019 to combat Female Genital Mutilation. It works to change cultures and heritages that lead to the continuation of violence against girls and women in Egyptian communities.
      
  Image
              My Body Belongs to Me
      
            This project was launched in 2019 to combat Female Genital Mutilation. It works to change cultures and heritages that lead to the continuation of violence against girls and women in Egyptian communities.
      
  Impact
               
80
      
            girls
      
            aged 14 to 18 were educated 
      
 
110
      
            mothers
      
            from 20 to 40 years old were educated