On June 26 this year the District Court of the
Federal State of Cologne, Germany, ruled that the circumcision of boys for
religious reasons at the request of parents constituted the infliction of
bodily harm and was therefore a punishable offense. The decision was made after
a case of a 4 -year-old Muslim boy
who suffered complications of bleeding 2 days after his circumcision by a
Muslim doctor. The doctor was acquitted, but, in future, any doctor performing
a circumcision in this sort of situation would be liable for prosecution, as
would the parents who allowed it.
Of course, this criminalization of male
circumcision affects Jews as well. In fact, the outcry against this legal
decision is one great big uniter of Jews and Muslims in Germany, for what
that’s worth.
It turns out that there are 220,000 Jews living in
Germany- who knew?- and vastly more Muslims. And, unlike the Germans, whose
birthrate is around 1.3 children per woman, along with the majority of western
countries whose birthrates are below population replacement levels, the Muslim
birthrate is WAY above replacement levels, so you do the math.
Therefore I personally think that this ruling will
not hold up because the Muslims will protest and nobody wants a Muslim protest!
Imagine all the burning Mercedes-Benzes and Audis and the loss of Ordnung in
the street. Unconscionable. So I would think that, ironically, it will probably
be the Muslims who will save the day so the Jews will be able to continue a
3,000-year-old practice which is so dangerous, that Jews are still around. So
traumatizing to the helpless infant that Jews still win more Nobel Prizes than
anyone else.
Yes, it is so dangerous that, in Africa, adult
males are clamoring to be circumcised as it has been shown to be effective
against the transmission of HIV.
Yes, yes, I know what the issues are here; it’s
about harming a child who has no ability to consent to a non-medically
necessary procedure. Even if his parents request the procedure, even if the
operator is a doctor. The issue is also about the transcendence of the Body
over the Soul. Now, where have I heard that before? Oh yes, the Ancient Greeks.
And the Romans. And the Soviets.
And where are they today?
I know that this topic tends to generate more heat
than light when it is argued. There are comparisons made to female genital
mutilation, which is already illegal in Germany and other countries, as if the
two procedures could be remotely compared in outcomes and effects on the
child’s future. As if there is a skerrick of evidence that FGM had any positive
outcomes either! Not a one, only damage to girls for no reason except ‘to
protect their honour’, whatever that is construed to mean. Whereas male
circumcision sometimes needs to be done for medical reasons –which IS allowed
under this German ruling - and can protect against HIV, for example, female
genital mutilation has only negative effects on girls and women, no matter how
small the cut or what is or isn’t excised or stitched up. So making both male circumcision
and FGM illegal serves to lump them together in a most unfair and disingenuous
way.
The Brit Milah is an eternal covenant between G-d
and the Jews. Now, G-d could have thought of other ways to make a covenant, I
guess. If it has to be seared into the flesh, why not a piercing or a tattoo?
I’m no Talmid Chochom or mystic, and I sure don’t know the mind of G-d, but it
seems to me that the foreskin is accessible and expendable, but more, the penis
represents the propagation of the Jewish people as well as the source of
pleasure for Man. With great privilege comes great responsibility! How amazing
is that, that the source of these two vital - literally, ‘vital’ pertaining to ‘vitum’,
life force - functions has this little removable turtleneck! I know this won’t
change the minds of the ‘intactivists’, but I think it’s no coincidence that
it’s the removal of the foreskin, rather than, say, the tonsils or appendix, that binds the Jews to G-d the Creator (sorry,
Muslims, Johnny-come-lately copycats) as an eternal reminder of the Chosenness
of the Jews. Also, once it’s removed, it’s gone, and no comebacks (unless the
job was done badly, which can happen, unfortunately, or unless you are deluded
enough to want to grow back the foreskin by surgical means), not like piercings
or tatts. No frivolity here.
So what about doing this procedure on a child who
is unable to give legal consent? Whose parents, despite the fact that they take
the baby for immunizations without consent, and force the child to go to
school, and make a child eat broccoli, certainly without consent, and are thus
in charge of the child’s welfare, both spiritual and physical- suddenly have no
legal or moral authority to have their son circumcised. Suddenly, despite a
3,000 year tradition which has such enormous power and meaning, and no doubt
has contributed to the continued existence of the Jews, is illegal. Suddenly
The Rights Of The Child To Have An Intact And Perfect Body And Not Have
Anything Done With Which He Cannot Consent, is sacrosanct. As a result of a
ruling in a German court. I find this a little ironic on several levels.
It was the Jews, after all, who, under G-d’s
command, abhorred Avodah Zara, idol worship, including the worship of Moloch,
which involved mothers sacrificing their children by throwing them into the
idol’s fiery maw and burning them alive. It was the Jews who came up with the
whole idea of ‘Choosing Life’, and ‘He who saves a single life, it is as if he
has saved the whole world’ and that ‘Man is a microcosm’ and ‘Man is created in
the image of G-d.’ It sure wasn’t the Enlightened Germans who ran with that
ball. But I digress.
Brit Milah may seem like a minor procedure
performed on a minor, but it’s of major importance. And the Jews will find a
way to continue the eternal covenant. We always have.
Who you calling little? Nah, jokes.
ReplyDeleteLove the "little removable turtleneck" line, never had one to see the comparison but still funny.
But seriously, you say copycats as a competitive thing, but I say imitation is the highest form of flattery. When a Muslim colleague turns to me for companionship in the sea of Aussie rednecks and calls me 'brother' (OK, cousin), I see it as flattery.
Ok, see it as flattery. Even tho the Quran does say that it was Ishmael who was bound at the Akeda, not Yitzchak. And just be aware that when you are having coffee with a Muslim, he is your best friend. But when another Muslim or 2 joins you, they will tend to gang up on you, Yahud. En masse, they would rather flatten you than flatter you. Only calling it as I see it. Of course many individual exceptions. But in things like the pogroms in Chevron in 1929, Arab neighbors turned on the Jews. And all the camaraderie and flattery a d mutual respect and admiration was worth 'chai Kak' in the words of my mothers cousin Chaim from Tzefat. I suppose now I will be called a racist Islamophobe but this is all a matter of historical record. I would love to be wrong.
ReplyDeleteI just read a letter in the NYT that doing circumcision in infancy is much simpler than when one is older. Recovery is quicker, the procedure is easier, etc.
ReplyDeleteThey are not taking that into consideration.
This topic always generates so much passion, but there are a couple of things worth reading:
ReplyDeletehttp://www.spiked-online.com/site/article/12595/
and for a more scholarly take from Spengler, aka David Goldman:
http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Global_Economy/NG03Dj02.html
The 'intactivists' are just beyond words, the way they carry on. And they all seem to be Jewish males who curse their parents for circumcising them, wish their parent were in prison, wish for women who circumcise their sons to undergo clitoridectomies, absolutely sick and unspeakable things. One has to wonder what sort of childhoods these men had.
I'm a little surprised that a woman might know that a man's foreskin is expendable. What medical knowledge brings you to this conclusion?
ReplyDelete3000 years of tradition? Faith in G-d and the eternal covenant? Realizing that there is something greater than a foreskin? I dunno, you pick. Over and out.
DeleteIs that what medical science says? You are a registered medical practitioner, so I was hoping for an explanation based on medicine.
DeleteAs you well know, medical science is divided on this. As I well know, you have a barrow to push and a bee in your bonnet over this, so I do not intend to get into any sort of debate with you. I won't change your mind, you won't change my mind, the difference is that I have these things I mentioned on my side. If you insist on adoring your foreskin, good for you. Good Shabbos. Over and out.
DeleteIs that the best you can come up with? You are trotting out your beliefs based on superstition and myth, none of which as based on modern medical science. Unless you are a Male-to-Female transwoman or intersex, you have no understanding of what it feels like to have an intact or removed foreskin. And so I asked again how you know that a foreskin is expendable, based on either medicine or as a woman.
DeleteLots of traditions have been around for thousands of years. Justifying them with "because it has always been that way" is an intellectually slack way to justify their continuity.
I suppose you are also against homosexuality. No doubt your claim your medical science is out on that one too, which I know is a lie, because medicine is not out on that one, yet your superstitions will tell you that you cannot accept homosexuality either.
So either your medicine and your superstitions are at odds with each other or you pick and choose.
Correction: "No doubt you claim..."
DeleteHokay, I said I wouldn't debate, and I won't; but clearly you have not read any of my previous posts or you would not be so 'intellectually slack' as to accuse me of homophobia. And when you and your fellow intactivists are forgotten and turned to dust, Brit Milah will still remain an Eternal Covenant between the Jews and G-d. That's what 'Eternal' means. If you don't believe, then don't! Do as you please. G-d bless.
ReplyDeleteI'm not accusing you of homophobia. I said "I suppose you are also against homosexuality." This statement was made based on the fact that Orthodox belief states that homosexuality is sinful and unacceptable. A "toevah".
DeleteI am not going to believe for one moment that you condone homosexuality. In fact I would be completely surprised if you were to encourage it, as a normal and healthy expression of human sexuality, whilst you claim to be an observant Jew.
This of course would put you at odds with your medical profession.
I would be overjoyed, however, to hear you say that you do accept homosexuality as normal and healthy. This would then make you a remarkable and inspirational individual.
@dr booba -
ReplyDeleteTwo simple questions I ask.
1. If the foreskin is not meant to be there, why are men born with it?
2. If God's design is all knowing and divine, why did he design the male body like that?
In all these debates, I have never seen anyone answer these two simple questions.
This is not the first time this question has been asked. In the Midrashic sources there is dialog between Rabbi Akiva and a Roman, Turnus Rufus the Evil, who asked the exact same questions. The answer is that G-d created the world imperfect and it is up to Man to perfect the world. Removal of the foreskin is an act of refinement of Man. Rabbi Akiva debated Turnus Rufus, who saw Nature as transcendent over Man. Akiva stated that it is in fact in the hands of Man to improve and perfect the creations of Nature. He uses examples of wheat and cakes, but also states how, when a child is born, the umbilical cord has to be cut. Nature is not a finished product.
ReplyDeleteI am not a rabbi and I believe that if you ask the right people you will get an answer. There are also Kabbalistic answers, and I am not a Kabbalist. Maybe look up Rabbi Ginsburg who is a Kabbalist, and see what he says. I hope that this helps you in your search.
Here are two responses to your blogs:
ReplyDeletehttp://www.brucellama.com/?p=2951
and
http://www.brucellama.com/?p=2958
Well, we will just have to agree to disagree. Tell your friend Bruce the same.
ReplyDeletePeace out. Really.