The Jewish Chronicle

German court rules circumcisi­on a crime

- BY TOBY AXELROD

A DISTRICT court in Germany has ruled that circumcisi­on may be considered a criminal act, raising alarm bells among Jewish institutio­ns around the world.

According to the District Court in Cologne, circumcisi­on is legally defensible only if is it medically required, not as a religious prescripti­on.

The head of the Central Council of Jews (CCJ) in Germany, Dieter Graumann, called the decision “outrageous and insensitiv­e”, and Abraham Foxman, National Director of the AntiDefama­tion League, said: “While the ruling does not appear to have antisemiti­c intent, its effect is to say ‘Jews are not welcome’.”

Mr Graumann called on Germany’s parliament to take action to prevent the District court case, involving a Muslim family, from setting a dangerous precedent that could endanger the religious life of both Muslims and Jews.

It is time to be wary, but not to panic, said attorney Nathan Gelbart, who is on the Central Council’s arbitratio­n court. The district court decision is not binding “as long as there is no decision by the High Court of Justice or High Constituti­onal Court,” Mr Gelbart said.

The ruling, which was made earlier this week, related to a Muslim couple who had brought their four-year-old son to a hospital a couple of days after his ritual circumcisi­on by a doctor. They were worried about continued bleeding but the child turned out to be well.

That apparently did not stop someone in the hospital from reporting the case to state prosecutor­s, who then brought charges against the doctor.

In a first trial, the court found that the doctor had done nothing wrong in fulfilling the wishes of the parents and upholding their religious freedom.

Theprosecu­torsappeal­ed, and this week came the judgment: although the d o c t o r was a c q ui t t e d because he had not known that his act was potentiall­y criminal, the interests of the child came before those of the parents or any abstract religious freedoms.

In the UK, the vice-president of the Board of Deputies and chair of its defence division, Jonathan Arkush, condemned the judgment as “intolerant and ill-informed… it is deeply troubling”.

On the implicatio­ns of the judgment for the UK, however, hesaid:“Idonot anticipate any changeinth­e lawfulness of circumcisi­on in this country.

“The General Medical Council, which is the gold standard in terms of the guidance given to doctors, emphasises the importance of circumcisi­on to Jews and Muslims.”

In Germany, the CCJ noted that circumcisi­on of eight-day-old boys — performed by a doctor or medically trained mohel — is an essential part of the Jewish faith. The right to practise this ritual “is respected in every country of the world,” said the CCJ.

Holm Putzke, a professor of criminal law at the University of Passau and a prominent voice in the ongoing public debate about non-medical circumcisi­on, said: “I can understand that the first reaction of Jews and Muslims might be that their religious freedoms are being threatened. But perhaps this is a first step to a debate… about what should be given more weight — religious freedom or the right of children not to have their genitals mutilated.” “The issue behind this is religious freedom,” said Ulrich Kober, head of the integratio­n and education department at the Bertelsman­n Foundation.

“How could you argue that parents have to wait to influence their children about religion until they are old enough to freely decide? This is not how religious tradition func

tions.”

 ?? PHOTO: AP ?? Fighting back: Dieter Graumann
PHOTO: AP Fighting back: Dieter Graumann

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