cynical lady Posted November 12, 2008 COLLECTIVE CUTS: Circumcision-By-Bulk in the Balkans In the southern Balkans, a small Muslim ethnic group maintains its collective identity by means of mass circumcision. Once every five years, villagers gather to ordain their boys. And to party for four straight days. The southern Balkans region is notorious for its history of vicious ethnic bloodletting. But it's also home to one ethnic group that has traditionally preferred bloodletting of a rather more peaceful sort.Indeed, when the former communist conglomerate of Yugoslavia crumbled over the course of the 1990s, the Gorani -- a small Muslim ethnic group scattered across present-day Serbia, Kosovo, Macedonia and Albania -- weren't among the groups clamoring for a nation-state to call their own. They just wanted enough freedom to maintain their cultural traditions. For those living in the mountain villages of Donje and Gornje Ljubinje in southern Kosovo that meant, above all, the quinntenial celebration of Sunet, the festival of mass circumcision. The modest circumstances of the Kosovar Gorani may not seem to justify celebration: the 3,000 residents are poor, even relative to their Albanian and Serb neighbors. But, the mass circumcision is a tradition that goes back centuries and locals feel it helps differentiate them from the myriad neighboring ethnic groups. "This is why we are not the same as the others, even when it does not help us," Arif Kurtishi, a member of the Gorani diaspora who returned to Donje Ljubinje last year from Sweden for the festival, told the AFP. At last year's Sunet, 130 boys from 10 months to five years -- some brought from abroad -- were circumcised by 70 year old Zylfikar Shishko, a barber from the nearby town of Prizren who has been performing the role for the last 45 years. "It has been so long, that I don't even know the number of boys I've circumcised in the Prizren area, maybe 15,000 or 20,000 or more," he said last year while making the rounds from home to home, likewise speaking to the AFP. No one can recount the origins of the festival, but some speculate it was intended, centuries ago, to serve as a cost-saving measure: wholesale, rather than retail, circumcision. The rates are still reasonable. For his efforts, Shishko charges around €10 for each operation, and he works pro bono for the poorest families. The procedure itself hasn't changed for centuries. To the sound of Muslim prayers, Shishko brandishes his instruments -- a scalpel, iodine and medical powder -- and applies them to each child. For the sake of tradition, the boys don't receive anesthetic -- Shishko is accompanied by two assistants who hold the boy down -- but they are compensated with presents and attention from the villagers. The to-be-circumcised are also the guests of honor at the three full days of festivities that precede and follow the incisions. These include a parade through the neighboring villages, oil wrestling, tug-of-war, stone throwing and live music from traditional five-man brass bands. When the festival comes to a close, the villagers return to their day-to-day hardships while the emigrants make their way to their new homes. In the coming five years, much is bound to change in Kosovo's political situation. But, the Goranis don't much involve themselves in the push-and-pull of governing outside their own villages. "Someone else, stronger and more powerful, will decide over the status of Kosovo," Shishko admits. Instead, the villagers have already noted the dates of the coming Sunet in 2012, and hope that Shikso stays healthy enough to attend. He has yet to find a successor. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Geel_jire Posted November 12, 2008 Imagine industrializing this process.. line up all the lil buggers put them on an assembly line ... quick and efficient. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
STOIC Posted November 12, 2008 I think in western Kenya they have this sought of rituals-though not muslims. How come all the old Somali men will tell you that they did the whole thing with their own hands while they tied the pendlum on a tree? Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Nephissa Posted November 13, 2008 tied on a tree @ . Must be knee length. Bet they could tie it in a knot too... ick! L0L Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
BOB Posted November 14, 2008 South African tribe called Xhosa do the same every Winter (from late May to late August) once the boy reaches 16 he's sent to the mountains for circumcision where he would remain until he's completely healed then he will be considered a man and not before that! a certain Mandela who also happens to be a Xhosa confessed to have refused first as he was scared to death but the daily teasing of his peers in his village gave him the courage to undergo the life changing experience, they throw a huge party when the boys return from the mountains and sometimes the party may last few days depending how rich the boy's parents are where they serve meat, ugali and local brew called Umqombothi. Peace, Love & Unity. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Khalid-Jnr Posted November 16, 2008 Research conducted by the US national institutes of health revealed that male circumcision can cut HIV infection among hetrosexuals by 50%. Similar study in South African revealed even better success rate of 60% reduction in HIV infections, both better prevention methods then traditional aproaches. Read more at http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/6176209.stm Despite this staggering success rate, the trails were halted, I bet it is much to do with its potential in denting the wallets of big pharmacutical companies who depend on the sale of aids medicine. As some else mentioned, there are a whole lot of non-muslim African tribes who use male circumcision. Remember the kenyan post-election tribal disturbance, apparently one of the ways to snif out the enemy within was to investigate their private parts (The Luo circumcise the male, Kukiyus don't). Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites