“I no longer need to re-marry,” says Muhammad Sharif, father of a girl who became a boy following a sex-change operation at Mianwali district headquarters (DHQ) hospital on Monday. 19-year-old Abdullah, earlier known as Ruqayya Bibi, was divorced a month ago after three years of marriage.
Sharif, a resident of Katcha Kamar Mashani area, said he no longer needed to re-marry as the ‘miracle’ had provided him with a male heir. He said earlier he had had four daughters, including Ruqayya, and his only son was mentally-challenged. “I had been thinking about re-marrying because I needed someone to carry the family name forward and to inherit my property,” he said, “But now I’ll arrange Abdullah’s marriage.”
Talking to The Tribune, Abdullah said he was excited about marrying as a man. “Three years ago, I was married as a bride. I would now marry as a groom.” He said he had been staying at his father’s house after being divorced a month ago.
Abdullah was discharged from the DHQ hospital on Thursday. Dr Rana Hafeezullah Khan, who performed the surgery, said he had recovered earlier than the doctors had expected. He said Abdullah was brought to him before Eid, then a woman, with severe pain in abdomen. He said on examining him and he found out that his anatomy was closer to a male than a female. He said he had told the family that Abdullah would continue to suffer severe pain unless a sex re-assignment surgery was performed.
Some elderly women from the neighbourhood who had accompanied the family to the hospital told The Express Tribune that throughout Ramazan Abdullah had been complaining about severe pain in his abdomen. “His father had initially refused to take him to a hospital,” one of them said. She said they had persuaded their husbands who then convinced Sharif to consult the DHQ hospital.
Published in The Express Tribune, September 9th, 2011.
COMMENTS (21)
Comments are moderated and generally will be posted if they are on-topic and not abusive.
For more information, please see our Comments FAQ
This person was a male and was brought up as a female as his testes were in his abdomen and did not come down as normally do in every newborn. Hence he did not get enough supply of hormones and the genitals became ambiguous (both male and female). The doc only operated and brought down the testes, but to become a functioning male! , you need more major extensive plastic surgeries which i doubt are even heard of in Mianwali. So this patient still needs more operations if he is to come even near any anotomical male. But male hormones can be given so he will grow beard etc and look like a man. Complicated isnt it???
i am very surprised to hear this but i am also happy about him because his life become better than before he is happy
I am wondering how come he (as she) survived marriage for 3 years!!
Before (and after) pics of the guy too, plz :)
@I own Karachi:
check your facts. the missing part still cannot be created. In the west many women who go through a sex change retain their female sexual organs.
Why did I even read this piece? Makes me sick !!
It is disheartening to to see that nobody has commented on a rather sad fact about this case: The father initially refused to take his daughter to the hospital and had to be convinced to do so. Once she had become a man, and hence a viable male heir for him however, he hailed the surgery as a "miracle".
As "progressive" as this might seem to some, it reeks of the same sexism and misogyny that plague us as a society still.
@uH: exactly... I wanted to hear from the proud Father
@MAD: these surgeries are common in every part of the World including far-eastern and pacific states like Philippines, Thailand etc and also in the Western World.
I wonder if the family would have given their consent for the procedure had the sex change been going the other way....
Wow. That is some seriously progressive reporting. I'm surprised we didn't get a blurb on how the clergy feel about that. I wonder technically, how Islamic this whole thing is, could be a game changer. Loving it.
Imagine how the ex-husband will feel. :s
this syndrome is called hermaphroditism, which is rare in the world but due to extensive use of hormones in cattle and chicken breeding, this happens in unborn foetus.
at times the the twin organs are visible at birth and parents are given an option to select,
I dont get this. obviously he was missing a certain part of the male anatomy which certainly cannot be replaced artificially. I have never heard of cush a surgury happenning any where in the world so how does this happen in pakistan. I dont think this news is correct.
@tina: Ha, ha, ha, ha, ha!
@Sarah: I agree.
@Sarah: Why is that so? :/
Something doesn't smell right here...
"I'm a man inside a woman's body!"
"Yeah whatever. LGBT rhetoric!"
"No! I swear!"
I am surprised to learnt that we actually have sex change surgery in Pakistan!