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A more accepting attitude towards trans-gender people has allowed many such people to come out in open. No longer willing to hide their true sexual identity, they are heading for a sex change operation and Serbia seems to be the preferred destination.
In Serbia, the whole process of rampant sex change surgeries started with Dr. Sava Perovic, who performed the first such surgery in Serbia on a man suffering from gender identity crisis. That was around twenty years back. Following the successful operation, many more men flocked to Dr. Perovic for such operations.
Soon, many other surgeons followed suit and now there are four specialized centers for sex change surgeries in this small country.

All this talk about sex change surgeries in trans-gender people brings us to a very pertinent question- what is trans-sexuality. Trans-sexuality has been defined as a condition wherein the people of one sex feel that they actually belong to the opposite gender and their body is not correct. Transgender people feel their gender identity is different from the one they were assigned at birth.

According to the Gay & Lesbian Alliance against Defamation (GLAAD), trans-gender people are uncomfortable in their skin since their childhood. This condition is all the more common in intersex children, i.e. children born with both male and female sex organs. Doctors often undertake surgeries in such children and assign them a particular sex. But it may not be the right sex for the child. As the child grows up, he may feel entrapped in the wrong body and long for a sex change operation. Because of the close mind of the society, such people find it extremely difficult to come out in the open and reveal their true gender identity. And when they do so, they are often made a subject of discrimination and ridicule.

It is difficult to determine the exact number of trans-genders in a society. However, according to the National Center for Transgender Equality in Washington, D.C., about 0.0025% to 1% of the entire U.S. population comprises of trans-gender people.

According to Professor Lynn Carr from Seaton Hall University, New Jersey, both experts and the common man confuse between sex, gender and sexuality. He says that being a male or a female is a person’s sex, whether he is masculine, feminine or androgynous in his behavior represents his sexuality, whereas sexuality is erotic in nature. A person can be homosexual, heterosexual, bisexual, or celibate according to his personal choice.

Many a times, females feel restricted by the narrow gender roles and exhibit gender nonconformity in their childhood. However, they reconcile by the time they grow up. However, in case of trans-sexuality, there is a strong and persistent desire to be of the other sex, and there are many psychological problems arising out of this condition. Such people often behave and dress like the other sex, and truly believe themselves to be belonging to the other sex.

Whether to come out is a purely personal decision taken by such people when they feel they have developed the emotional and psychological stamina to deal with the reaction of their immediate family members, their near and dear ones, and the society at large. It is only when they have gauged their support system that they gather the courage to face the world. However, if the support system is in place, and they come out in the open, trans-gender people often head for sex change surgeries.

According to experts, male to female (MTF) sex change operations are more common and more successful than the female to male operations (FTM). A study published in the September 2007 issue of the journal BJU International found that there are certain complications of MTF gender change surgery. They include vaginal hair growth (29%), problems in urination (27%), vaginal prolapse (6%), and vaginal tissue death (3%). However, these problems can be corrected by secondary surgery and most of the people undertaking sex change operations are happy with the results.

  • “Serbia Becomes a Hub for Sex-Change Surgery”, by Dan Bilefsky, published in the July 23, 2012 issue of The New York Times, accessed on August 17, 2012.
  • “Sex Change Operations: The Science, Sociology and Psychology”’ by Sally Law, published on June 18, 2009 at livescience.com, accessed on August 17, 2012.
  • Photo courtesy of photocomix-mandala on Flickr: www.flickr.com/photos/photocomix-mandala/4473127871
  • Photo courtesy of drurydrama on Flickr: www.flickr.com/photos/drurydrama/1463181304