Religious Rights on Trial as Circumcision Case
Reaches Oregon’s High Court
AJCongress Counsel: ‘We Have To Win This
Case, and Win it Big’
Jennifer Siegel | Wed. Aug 15, 2007
The highest-level case in American history involving
the right to circumcision is slated to be heard this
fall, when the Oregon Supreme Court rules on
whether a father can have his 12-year-old son undergo
the procedure.
The case — which could affect the ability of
parents to make religiously motivated decisions for
their children — is bound up with a bitter
custody dispute between a divorced Oregon couple. It
pits James Boldt, the custodial parent and a recent
convert to Judaism, against Lia Boldt, who argues that
the boy is afraid to tell her ex-husband that he does
not want to be circumcised. She says that the boy would
be physically and psychologically harmed by the
procedure.
The acceptance of the case by Oregon’s highest
court is surprising, because judges generally grant a
wide degree of latitude to custodial parents — so
much so, in fact, that the state’s Court of
Appeals rejected the mother’s case without
issuing an opinion. If the Oregon Supreme Court decides
to review the merits of the father’s plan for
circumcision, it will almost inevitably weigh in on two
related issues: the right of custodial parents to guide
their children’s religious upbringings, and the
weight that religious considerations should be given
when considering the welfare of a child.
“Are parents only authorized to make decisions
that a secular decision-maker would make?” asked
Marc Stern, general counsel for the American Jewish Congress, which is
filing a friend-of-the-court brief in support of James
Boldt. “We have to win this case, and win it big,
in my view” Stern said.
“Our position is that the custodial parent can
take into account religious interests in determining
what’s in the interest of the child,” Stern
added.
Historically, the American courts have given parents
wide latitude in making decisions rooted in religious
belief. In one seminal 1972 case, Wisconsin v. Yoder, the Supreme
Court upheld the right of Amish parents to remove their
children from public school after the eighth grade,
despite a law mandating education through age 16. At
the same time, many judges have stepped in to protect
children from health risks posed by religiously
motivated parental decisions in the contexts of blood
transfusions and medical treatment.
Given the high stakes of the Boldt case, which is
scheduled to be heard sometime this fall, advocates on
both sides of the dispute are weighing in.
“Our position is that you do not cut off healthy
tissue from a child,” said John Geisheker,
executive director and general counsel of Doctors Opposing Circumcision,
which is filing a friend of the court brief on behalf
of Lia Boldt. “The boy has a right to be secure
in his own body. Parents can believe in anything they
like, but when it comes to religious practices, those
cannot endanger the child in any way.”
Stern said he is in the process of drafting the brief
for AJCongress and expects several other major Jewish
organizations to sign on.
One notable exception is the Anti-Defamation League, which has
been prominent in a number of church-state cases.
According to a spokeswoman, Myrna Shinbaum, the ADL is
not taking a position in the matter, as it is
“essentially a custody dispute.”
If some are reluctant to weigh in on Boldt, it may be
because of a complicating factor at the heart of the
case: the boy himself. Called “Jimmy” by
his father and “Mischa” by his mother, and
bounced from her home to his in the wake of an ongoing
custody battle, he has aged three years as the
circumcision case has wound its way to the Oregon
Supreme Court. While both sides in the dispute claim to
have the boy’s support, his own testimony has yet
to be requested by the courts.
Since the 1950s, the Supreme Court, in the context of
cases involving both contraception and abortion, has
generally expanded the rights of teenagers when it
comes to their own bodies. Harvard Law
School professor Martha Minow, an expert in family
law and in cases involving religious rights, would like
to see that precedent extended in Oregon.
“If the child at issue is 12 years old, a court
would rightly consider that individual’s own view
— about religion and about the procedure at issue
— perhaps not as the ultimate basis for the
decision but as a vital input,” Minow wrote in an
e-mail to the Forward. “Legally, morally,
and practically, the view of an emerging adolescent
would be highly germane here just as it would for a
medical decision facing a pregnant teen.”
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