NEW YORK (WJC) — The World Jewish Congress (WJC) has strongly protested calls by Swedish and Danish medical associations for a ban on religious male circumcision.
“The recommendation of the two medical associations is an insulting and intrusive assault on religious freedom,” said WJC CEO Robert Singer.
“Religious circumcision, a procedure that has been practiced safely for millennia, confers notable health benefits. It is a bulwark against urinary-tract infections, cervical cancer and HIV-AIDS, which is why it is being promoted heavily by medical authorities in Africa and other places. Given the compelling religious freedom and health reasons for religious circumcision, the Swedish and Danish medical associations need to recognize that their call for a ban represents an appeal to xenophobia and ignorance and not enlightened science.”
According to the ‘Jewish Telegraphic Agency’, the Ethics Council of the Sweden Medical Association, the union representing of 85 percent of the country’s physicians, last week recommended setting 12 as the minimum age for the circumcision and requiring the boy’s consent. The 3,000-member Danish College of General Practitioners contended in a statement that non-medical circumcision of boys amounts to abuse and mutilation, according to news reports.
Jews perform religious circumcision, or brit milah, eight days after birth, while Muslims generally circumcise boys before the age of 10.
The American Academy of Pediatrics stated in 2012 that the “preventive health benefits of elective circumcision of male newborns outweigh the risks of the procedure” and that “benefits include a significant reduction of urinary tract infections in the first year of life and, subsequently, in the risk of heterosexual acquisition of HIV and in the transmission of other sexually transmitted infections.” Moreover, the Academy declared, “Parents ultimately should decide whether circumcision is in the best interests of their male child.”
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Preceding provided by World Jewish Congress
The American Academy of Pediatrics stated in 2012 that the “preventive health benefits of elective circumcision of male newborns outweigh the risks of the procedure” yes but they hasten to add: “but not enough to recommend it…”. This critical point is glaringly absent in the above article.
The fact is that NO medical association in the world recommends the routine circumcision of newborns, not even in Israel.
Girls get far more UTI’s than boys ever thought of getting, but both sexes can be easily treated with antibiotics. No need to cut at all.