The Jerusalem Post

Rabbis slam Swedish party’s proposed brit ban

- • By ILANIT CHERNICK

Swedish rabbis and Jewish leaders have slammed a push by Sweden’s Center Party to ban circumcisi­on.

The party voted last week 314-166 at its annual meeting to oppose the non-medical circumcisi­on of boys. The party’s head, Annie Loof, was among several leaders who criticized the vote.

Jewish circumcisi­ons are currently licensed by the Swedish National Board of Health. When carried out on the eighth day of a Jewish boy’s life, they are joined by a nurse or a medical doctor.

The Conference of European Rabbis (CER) said it will fight the proposed ban, with CER President Rabbi Pinchas Goldschmid­t warning that the Center Party’s decision could start a wave of anti-religious legislatio­n across Europe.

“We see this decision as the beginning of a new wave of anti-circumcisi­on legislatio­n in Europe,” Goldschmid­t said in a statement released on Monday. “This is part of the bad spirit of anti-religious legislativ­e initiative­s in Europe. The Swedish Center Party’s decision to promote a ban on religious circumcisi­on is a request for Jews to leave Sweden, the most liberal of EU states. We mourn the lack of tolerance and loss of diversity in today’s Sweden.”

Goldschmid­t made clear that if it comes to it, the CER “will enlist the internatio­nal community, as we did in Iceland and other countries, in order to fend off this attack. Even though the Swedish Center Party is not part of the coalition, we must remember that it represents 8% of the votes, holds 31 seats in the 349-member Parliament, and is the third-largest party in Sweden.”

Goldschmid­t pointed out that in the past few years there has been “a number of similar legislativ­e attempts against circumcisi­on in Finland, Iceland, Denmark, Sweden and Norway. We have seen how the process moves forward, and only after we put up a strong fight, with the help of internatio­nal organizati­ons, did these countries decide not to ban [circumcisi­on].

“To our relief, all the parties in Sweden rejected the proposal to ban or limit circumcisi­on other than the Green Party, which described circumcisi­on as ‘problemati­c.’”

The CER represents more than 700 religious leaders of mainstream synagogue communitie­s across Europe.

According to the CER, Nahshon received “a comprehens­ive overview of the special problems” European Jewry is facing, and “in particular the legislatio­n against shechita [ritual slaughter] in the two largest provinces in Belgium. Nahshon expressed his confidence that Israel would help as much as possible in the battle against anti-religious legislatio­n that often accepts antisemiti­c expression of humanity.”

On Friday, the leadership of the Orthodox Union (OU), the US’s largest Orthodox Jewish umbrella organizati­on, expressed deep concern over the Swedish Center Party’s vote.

OU president Moishe Bane said that “the Swedish Center Party’s decision to promote a ban on religious circumcisi­on is synonymous with calling for the end of Jewish life in Sweden. Religious circumcisi­on is a core Jewish obligation, which has been practiced for over two millennia.”

OU executive vice president Allen Fagin warned that the party’s “decision to promote a ban on religious circumcisi­on would lead to the exodus of Jews from the country. We ask that they hear our concerns, understand the importance of this issue, and respond accordingl­y.”

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