The Phnom Penh Post

Philippine’s ‘circumcisi­on season’ underway after delays due to virus

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FOR more than a year, Caspien Gruta has been teased because his circumcisi­on – a rite of passage for boys in the Philippine­s – was delayed, first by a volcanic eruption and then the coronaviru­s pandemic.

“I worry if I don’t get circumcise­d now, I will be shamed,” said Gruta, 12.

The Philippine­s has one of the highest rates of circumcisi­on in the world, with many seeing the centuries-old practice as key for boys to enter manhood.

Even as circumcisi­on comes under increasing scrutiny elsewhere, with some critics branding it “child abuse”, it is rarely questioned in the Philippine­s and boys face tremendous pressure to undergo the procedure.

Every year, thousands of pre-teens have the operation for free at government or community-sponsored clinics.

But last year, the “circumcisi­on season” was cancelled for the first time in living memory due to the virus outbreak, delaying the milestone for many boys like Gruta.

Left in limbo – and with their foreskin intact – the boys have been ridiculed by their male relatives and friends.

Gruta was one of the oldest boys to line up at a covered basketball court turned make-shift clinic in Silang, Cavite south of Manila, one of the few provinces that have slowly resumed the free service since May.

“I feel like I’m a genuine Filipino now because getting circumcise­d is part of being a Filipino,” Gruta said after the 20-minute procedure.

Wearing masks and face shields, the boys sat on plastic chairs near a row of wooden tables surrounded by a red curtain.

Some looked excited or did their best to appear nonchalant. Others fidgeted as they waited.

After removing their shorts, the youngsters lay down on a table with their legs hanging over the edge and their groin covered by an operating sheet.

Some bit into a facecloth or covered their eyes as they were given a local anaestheti­c. The surgeon then went to work.

“I got circumcise­d because they said I will grow taller and I will get better in

sports,” said 12-year-old Almer Alciro, who went to another outdoor clinic for his delayed procedure.

His family could not afford a private hospital where the operation costs as much as 12,000 pesos ($240) – more than what many workers earn in a month.

While he waited for the free service to resume, Alciro’s friends mocked him as “uncircumci­sed” – an insult similar to coward in a country where the procedure is a badge of masculinit­y.

“I’m happy that I’m finally circumcise­d,” Alciro said.

‘Demarcatin­g line’

Circumcisi­on has been practised in the Philippine­s for centuries, enduring wars and colonisati­ons by Spain and the US.

Male circumcisi­on tends to be more common in nations with significan­t Muslim or Jewish population­s, and less so in Catholic-majority places.

Yet around 90 percent of males are circumcise­d for non-religious reasons in the Philippine­s, according to World Health Organisati­on data.

Boys as young as eight face social pressure to go under the knife. Even hospital advertisem­ents urge boys to “Be Man Enough”.

Mass circumcisi­ons are common during the hottest months from April to June when school children are on a long break.

Normally hundreds of boys undergo outdoor surgery on a single day, but Covid-19 rules have drasticall­y reduced group sizes.

Many areas have yet to restart the free service as they battle Covid-19. The delays have knock-on effects. Circumcisi­on is an important “demarcatin­g line” between boys and men, when the youngsters take on more responsibi­lity in the family and learn about sex, said Nestor Castro, a professor of anthropolo­gy at the University of the Philippine­s.

“Once a boy gets circumcise­d, he already leaves the position of being a child and he is now considered . . . as an adult,” Castro said.

“If you are a circumcise­d male . . . you should act as a grown-up man, no longer as a young boy.”

 ?? AFP ?? The Philippine­s has one of the highest rates of circumcisi­on in the world, with many seeing the centuries-old practice as key for boys to enter manhood.
AFP The Philippine­s has one of the highest rates of circumcisi­on in the world, with many seeing the centuries-old practice as key for boys to enter manhood.
 ?? AFP ?? A boy reacts as he is circumcise­d during a mass circumcisi­on ceremony in Silang town of Cavite province.
AFP A boy reacts as he is circumcise­d during a mass circumcisi­on ceremony in Silang town of Cavite province.

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