November 2, 2012 · 27 Comments
The Edna Adan Maternity Hospital in Somaliland Cares for Patients, Trains Midwives, and Advocates Against FGM
My hospital, the Edna Adna Hospital took a lifetime to be born. The idea of building it has been with me since I was 11 years old, but it had to wait until I retired and had enough means, freedom, and time to build it, so that the we had the resources to help as many women as possible. For years, I held various key positions with the World Health Organization (WHO), and among other responsibilities, advocated for the abolition of harmful traditional practices, such as female genital mutilation (FGM), a harmful form of violence against women performed by in communities around the world. Upon my return, I built the Edna Adan Maternity Hospital in Hargeisa, Somaliland, from the ground up and trained the nurses necessary to staff it. It took four years to build and opened in March of 2002.
Since then, we’ve taken great strides to improve the lives of women in our community. In the first 10 years that the hospital was open, we delivered around twelve thousand babies. Over a thousand of those were born through c-section and a good number of them had treatments to control eclampsia, which is the biggest killer in my country. We saw women who traveled four or five days to see us, with the placenta still inside of them – women who we will never understand how they managed to reach us still alive. Some die at our doorstep, some die shortly after admission.
The practice of female genital mutilation (FGM) only further complicates the dangerous health issues we see every day. To reduce gender-based violence around the world, education is key. FGM is done out of a perceived sense of duty. The family thinks they are doing the right thing and that it is a religious duty, but FGM is actually contrary to the teachings of Islam. They believe it is hygienic, which it is not. They believe that it will improve their daughter’s marriageability, which it does not. Along with various other complications,cutting practices obstruct the female reproductive system and interferes with their ability to have children.
When we went back to the drawing board, we found that we had overlooked the major role that men should and must play when addressing this issue. Parents, both mothers and fathers, must join hands to prevent this harmful practice. It cannot remain a “women’s” issue. It is a human issue. It is a family issue. We must incorporate men and ask them to show their strength, show their heroism as heads of the household. Fighting against female genital mutilation should be the role of the men as well as the women.
To ensure that people had the proper training to prevent these problems, we made the hospital a teaching hospital, which not only helps patients, it also trains more people throughout the community skills that save women’s lives. Teaching is one of the most empowering things that one can do for women. If God gives me time, I want to train one thousand midwives to go to rural areas where the women have nothing and there is no one to care for them. While not as common in developed countries, it costs less than one cup of coffee a day to provide a midwife with the appropriate training and the rewards are incalculable. This will save many lives in rural areas where doctors aren’t as common or are too far away in case of a medical emergency. Once trained, the women can go back to their communities, empowered, competent, and vocal. While it would also be a good idea to work with doctors, doctors take a lot more time and money to train and, when their training is complete, they do not want to go out to remote villages. Midwives, on the other hand, are flexible and, more importantly, they are women. Women are strong members of society and act as powerful voices against many of the problems, including gender-based violence, that women face.
My hospital is just a small drop in the ocean of problems that need to be addressed. FGM is still a persistent problem, not only in Somaliland, but also around the world, and hundreds of thousands of mothers die during childbirth every single year. We’ve got our work cut out for us, but if we band together and work hard every single day to get women and girls the care they need, I know that we will have a brighter future not just for women but also for entire families, communities, and countries.
By Edna Aden
Edna Adan Ismail is the former first lady of Somaliland and a relentless advocate for women’s rights. To learn more about her and her hospital, please visit her website.
Follow @somalilandpressTags: Edna Adan, FGM, Medical center, Somaliland
God bless you Habaryaro.
gosh that xijaabis look too colourful anyway aunty adna is one in million for me i hope she comes to togdheer and help us out inshalaah
well I can call her ayeeyo since my ayeeyo is Arab harshin :)
God bless you ayeeyo
@amal
the only thing i have in come with the arab shikh isaaq is i have one cousin who is arab but i heard they are warriors i maybe one day go to baligubadle and get to know them better since they are reer shikhisaaq family what do you think cousin or would they think am looking for arab husband
You need a faqash husband like me.
Looool PuntlandGeezer, Misslovely is yours, she needs a ruthless Faqash like you,
big up for Faqash
Faqash are not allowed to marry our women thou
looool Amal nowadays Faqash means Darood dee, are you saying Daroods are not allowed to marry Isaaq girls, hun they have been doing that since the beginning of the Somali race, like you said Habr younis mom was Darood and Dhulba mom was isaaq.
plus Misslovely is a village girl from Qoruludud the only Faqash she ever known was a Dhulbahante cowboy, let PuntlandGeezer take her and show the real world and his farm. ciidii casayd baa indha hakariday waxay arkayso ma layaqaan. loool
I meant Qorulugud, it's a village between Buuhodle and Burco in case u didn't know loool
Khatumo,
looooooool you are funny mayn. Faqash doesn't mean darood what the hell. I got a darood older sister are you trying to say she is faqash :( To me faqash is those bad SNA soldiers in late 1980's and those who support it and wish the same like puntland geezer and we both hate those faqash
But Some silly people miss use this term so faqash lost its meaning now, I think people like misslovely calls everyone faqash.
Anways good night.
ps I didn't know you saw yourself as faqash. So every time I say faqash you think I am talking about about darood? I don't call darood faqash darood is a Somali clan but I call the evil haters faqash.
Oh and you got good geographical knowledge of Somaliland never heard of qurulaq lol
looooool Amal u make me laugh, I don't see Faqash as an insult tbh, it is like saying IIdoooor (Isaaq) or Walanwayn (hawiye), I don't know but I saw many people calling Daroods Faqash.. so basically it's Darood nickname.
Misslovely is obsessed with Faqash that's why we should give her to PuntlandGeezer to see what the real Faqash look alike, a son of general Morgan loooool.
hahaha miss lovely you are funny cousin I got lots of Arabs family, yes they are warriors Arab dandakax dee. Why not Arab husband, no problem he will punish faqash like piratelandgeezer.
Mise inadeerkay HY ayaan ku siiya dee dirbaaxo kulul ha ku dhufto dhoofaarkan faqashgeezer la dhaho
copy and paste
the actual title was the one you used as a sub head
what a pity
lool I can call her Habryaro since My mom is Isaaq or Ayeeyo since Saciid Harti (Dhulbahante) wife was Arab.
you are right I think I heard Arab ba idin dashay too. HY mum was darood too
Majeerteen inay majnuun wada tahaan marag u haystaaye Waa niman masakhan oon ahayn midhaha Daaroode Waa niman siddii Moolaadhabe miciya dheerdheere Waa niman maddada oo cir weyn oo masiiba ahe Waa niman gabooye ku biirsadey iyadoo la ogyahey Bari ilaa mudug lagu ogeyn midho daroode…
You should be deported back to Zanzibar since most 0.5 have returned home.
This guy is sick xita islaamaheeni sharafta lahaa ba ka amaan la. He is truly a faqash but I believe he doesn't represent the good majerteen people who are our fellow neighboring Somalis.
Adna iska daayee, Habaryarahay Dahaba-Dhuuqa iyo Maryan Qodax baanaan kuu dhisneen.
Good effort but a single person wouldn't do that much; Man it should be regulated. ignorance is so bad walahi; In the eighties egyptian authoroties banned this stupid practice and would jale the parents for 20 years if they did this horroble act to their daughter. It worked after all
Edna is a pro-union that's why she makes her girls wear the blue flag as hijjab. Well done eedo. Keep entertaining the crazy grievers.
keep dreaming moory@n
Somaliland will NEVER unite with Somalia get that in your head.
This great lady has already done enough for her beloved country..
Edna Aden is doing marvellous job for her country. She is an example for what people should be doing instead of concentrating their energies on negative stuff.
I think Khaatumo supporters in here should realise by constantly dragging every entry into tribal talk will only make them look foolish. Just because you know the tribes in Somaliland does not mean it will do any good to your misguided and ill-advised project.