Penis Turkesh Sunnet Video
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Penis Turkesh Sunnet Video
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Photographer Ahmet Izgi recorded the reactions of a number of boys aged around six or seven at a clinic in the capital Ankara
A SERIES of pictures shows the contorted faces of young boys screaming as they undergo ritual circumcision in Turkey.
An adult holds each lad down on a bed as a medic performs the surgery, which traditionally marks the first step to becoming a man.
Photographer Ahmet Izgi recorded the reactions of a number of boys - all aged around six or seven - at a clinic in the capital Ankara.
The sünnet ritual, usually held when boys are aged between five and 12, is an important religious and traditional custom across Turkey.
The name literally means "busy path" and refers to adherence to the teachings of the Prophet Mohammed.
The ritual signals the transition to adulthood and has deep religious significance for followers of Islam.
Some families throw huge parties with food and music to celebrate the occasion in homes, restaurants or banqueting halls.
Feasts can last several days as relatives gather and give the boy gifts such as money, sweets and clothes.
In grander ceremonies the boys dress up in silk Ottoman costumes and parade around the town on horseback.
Istanbul has a huge "Palace of Circumcision" where wedding-style banquets are thrown with clowns hired to entertain groups of boys who are circumcised together on the same day.
When it is time for the procedure itself - which lasts a few seconds - family members gather close round the bed to watch.
A close friend or family member called a kirve - similar to a godparent in the Christian tradition - will hold the lad's arms while a licensed practitioner makes the incision.
As in other Islamic nations, Turkish men who are not circumcised are often made to feel ashamed or dirty and virtually all boys have it done.
But in some areas the traditional sünnet ceremonies are dying out as parents opt to have sons circumcised in hospital at birth to prevent pain and fear when they are older.
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The day of the sünnet is a big celebration for Turkish families, marking the first step in their son’s passage from boyhood to man. Group circumcisions are common, particularly at Istanbul’s Sünnet Sarayı (Circumcision Palace).
The boys dress up in traditional costumes, complete with a beaded crown and white satin cape, reminiscent of the Ottoman Empire. They are sultans for the day.
Parents hire entertainers and clowns to help their children relax before the procedure.
The operation only lasts a few seconds, but is eagerly watched by the boy’s family.
Before the day is over, the boys are checked by circumcision palace doctor Levent Özkan. They are given iPads to distract them.
The boys in today’s group are seven- to eight-years-old. Dr Özkan says many families wait until this age so “parents can explain to their sons what is happening”.
After the operation, the boys return to the dance floor to celebrate and dance with their parents ... gingerly.
It’s now illegal in Turkey to perform circumcision on boys between the ages of two and six to prevent psychological trauma: “If the children don’t understand why it’s happening, they just remember the pain,” Dr Özkan says.
Dr Levent Özkan’s father opened the palace in 1976 and claimed to have circumcised more than 125,000 children in his lifetime.
After a final check by doctors, the boys and their families leave the Sünnet Sarayı in the Levant district of Istanbul. Increasingly private hospitals in Turkey are encouraging families to carry out the operation during the first few months of their child’s life so they have no memory of it at all. Of course, they may still have the party later.
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Much is made of male circumcision (or sünnet ) in Turkey, a ritual that many believe marks the first step of a boy becoming a man. Photographer Bradley Secker has gained access to Istanbul’s Circumcision Palace, which claims to have performed more than 100,000 of the operations since it opened in 1976.
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Published: 12:04 BST, 29 June 2017 | Updated: 13:31 BST, 29 June 2017
Having a delicate medical procedure is normally quite a private affair - but not for these boys who are being circumcised in Turkey.
Eye-watering images reveal the moment the boys were operated on in Ankara, the Turkish capital, without anaesthetic in a ritual known as sunnet.
Circumcision is widely practiced across the Muslim world, but has special significance in Turkey where it is viewed as the first step from boyhood to manhood.
Parents prepare for the day for months beforehand, throwing lavish parties for the boys which often involve costumes, music, dancing, and gifts of gold and clothing, according to the Turkish Cultural Foundation .
Eye-watering images document the moment boys in Turkey are circumcised in a ritual known as sunnet - which means 'busy path', signifying the route to God and the moral decisions people must make while travelling along it
Circumcision is widely practiced in Islam, but holds special significance in Turkey where it is viewed as a right of passage and the first step from boyhood to manhood
While some Turkish parents have their children circumcised at birth, the vast majority wait until they are old enough to appreciate the significance of the event, though there is no set age at which it must take place
Boys are often prepared for months before the circumcision as parents plan the all-day parties that usually accompany the event, with extended family invited to participate
The procedure is so revered that wealthy families will often pay for circumcisions for poor or orphaned boys and have them operated on alongside their own children
While these children are wearing their own clothes, it is typical for boys to be dressed in elaborate outfits - with wealthier parents weaving jewels into white robes made specially for the occasion
Muslims practice circumcision as a way of being like Mohammed, who was said to have been born without a foreskin. In the Sunnah, a holy text recording the Prophet's words and actions, he states the procedure is 'a law for men'
While there is no set age for boys to be circumcised in Turkey, it often takes place after they start attending school but before they hit puberty. It is not uncommon for several children from the same family to have the procedure together
Spring, summer and autumn months are generally preferred for the operations, which often take place on Saturdays or Sundays to allows as many people as possible to attend
Sweets and balloons (pictured in this child's hands) are used to distract the boys, while guardians are chosen to hold their arms during the operation. Islamic prayers are often said at the same time
Circumcision is seen as the first step toward becoming a man, and as such is often performed with little or no anaesthetic - with the pain seen as essential to proving the boys' masculinity
In large cities, including Ankara where these images were taken, medics are brought in to perform the surgeries - but in rural Turkey the position is trusted to a man who usually inherits it from his father
In remote parts of Turkey reports of botched operations are not uncommon - with permanent damage caused, potentially leading to infection, gangrene, and even amputation in some extreme cases
The person holding the boys' arms are known as kirve, and after the ceremony will become a godfather figure and considered part of the child's family
This is atrocious. DM, take down these photos of t...
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