• Circumcision has taken a great deal of attention as a result of the increase in the number of victims in the last container. • Egyptians have known circumcision since ancient times, and their bodies reveal the evidence of their circumcision in prehistoric times. • Circumcision is performed with sterile instruments to avoid complications and by a specialist doctor. The drug must be administered and the foreskin cleaned and removed from the pubis and the urethra. Female circumcision is usually wrong done by Muslims. It does not have any pharaonic origin and has no explicit text. It is all due to social norms and inherited traditions, since it usually has nothing to do with religion. It was known before the appearance of heavenly religions. Female genital mutilation (FGM) is a form of torment and pain for women due to complications and neurological trauma throughout her life, and the girl's future exposure to many problems, including the difficulty of marital cohabitation due to the removal of a large part of the clitoris. • Circumcision causes physical and psychological harm to the girl and must be avoided in compliance with the values of Islam, namely, not to harm the female. • Circumcision has many religious, moral, health, sexual, psychological and social damages.
Mahmoud, A. M. M. M. (2019). Provisions of Circumcision in the Light of Islamic Law. The bulletin of the Faculty of Islamic and Arabic Studies for Girls in Alexandria, 35(1), 259-344. doi: 10.21608/bfda.2019.63799
MLA
Amira Mohamed Maghazi Mahmoud Mahmoud. "Provisions of Circumcision in the Light of Islamic Law", The bulletin of the Faculty of Islamic and Arabic Studies for Girls in Alexandria, 35, 1, 2019, 259-344. doi: 10.21608/bfda.2019.63799
HARVARD
Mahmoud, A. M. M. M. (2019). 'Provisions of Circumcision in the Light of Islamic Law', The bulletin of the Faculty of Islamic and Arabic Studies for Girls in Alexandria, 35(1), pp. 259-344. doi: 10.21608/bfda.2019.63799
VANCOUVER
Mahmoud, A. M. M. M. Provisions of Circumcision in the Light of Islamic Law. The bulletin of the Faculty of Islamic and Arabic Studies for Girls in Alexandria, 2019; 35(1): 259-344. doi: 10.21608/bfda.2019.63799