Breast milk and soot mark Turkey's fading
beauty
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[December 09, 2017]
By Umit Bektas
KIZILTEPPE, Turkey (Reuters) - When Ayse
Yusufoglu was a girl, she and her friends in southeast Turkey tried to
win the hearts of young men in their village using breast milk and soot.
Mixing the two ingredients, and wielding a simple needle, they applied
traditional tattoos to their faces, legs and hands.
"I was in love with a man, who later became my husband. I wanted him to
find me beautiful," says the 84-year-old Yusufoglu. "Although the needle
hurt badly, we young girls of 10 and 16 used to tattoo each other."
The girls tattooed simple designs from the world around them - the sun,
the moon and household goods like a comb.
As was their custom, they collected the soot from the bottom of cooking
pots used on wood fires, and mixed it with breast milk from a mother
feeding an infant girl.
"The milk of a mother nursing a girl is used because the tattoo made
with this milk comes out a paler shade of green," 87-year-old Hulu
Aydoglu says. "The milk of a mother nursing a boy comes out darker."
The tattoos are still visible on Yusufoglu's lined face 70 years on, but
the practice is dying out.
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Hulu Aydogdu (87) poses as she speaks about her tattoos at her home
in Kisas village in southeastern province of Sanliurfa, Turkey,
November 22, 2017. Picture taken November 22, 2017. REUTERS/Umit
Bektas
Some women blame growing religious opposition to the practice in
Turkey, saying preachers have told them the tattoos are a sin, but
Yusufoglu says the traditional methods have just been overtaken.
"At that time, the tattoos were our make-up," she says. "Now there
is make-up - and no need to make oneself beautiful with tattoos."
(Editing by Dominic Evans and Kevin Liffey)
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