Obviously, FGM is a very serious issue and I hope you don't think I was at all trying to detract from that conversation with this article. However, other foetal anatomical drawings of this angle don't focus on external female genital features, so I don't think it's fair to say that this drawing was deliberately censoring or removing them. The singling out of this Nigerian artist's work did the opposite, I think, of bringing awareness to FGM -- it deflected away from another issue, the lack of Black bodies in anatomy lessons, in order to push Pin's agenda, which only muddied the water. Her cooption of that particular drawing was problematic, and that's what I hoped to get across. I was absolutely not trying to minimize the violence of FGM. It's valid to critique the TikTok as being dismissive of FGM, but there should be room to discuss both the lack of nonwhite anatomical illustrations and FGM without going the route Pin went, of dismissing the former problem entirely (and insinuating that the Nigerian artist did something wrong/deliberate by not including external genitalia in the model).