Oregon Legal Battle Ignites Debate on
Circumcision
By Staff Reporter of the Sun
September 18, 2007
A legal battle between divorced parents in Oregon
about the circumcision of their 12-year-old son is fast
becoming a flash point between critics of the procedure
and those who endorse it on medical and religious
grounds.
James Boldt, a recent convert to
Judaism, wants his son, who is also said to be
converting, circumcised. Mr. Boldt's ex-wife, Lia, has
objected. Lower courts sided with Mr. Boldt, who has
full custody of his son. However, the Oregon Supreme Court has agreed to
hear arguments in the dispute in November.
Four Jewish organizations, the American
Jewish Committee, the American Jewish Congress, the Anti-Defamation League, and the Orthodox
Union, have joined together in an amicus curiae
brief supporting the father's right to proceed over the
mother's objections.
"It is of particular importance to amici that American
Jews be free to practice circumcision because
circumcision is and has been one of the most
fundamental and sacred parts of the Jewish religion,"
the groups wrote. "Enabling the circumcision of a
child, whether as part of a religious conversion or for
medical reasons, cannot as a matter of law indicate any
infirmity in a parent's ability to function as a
parent. Moreover, any decision to single out
circumcision as a basis for questioning the fitness of
the custodial parent would violate the First
Amendment's guarantee of freedom of religion."
Ms. Boldt is being backed by a Seattle-based group, Doctors Against Circumcision, which
contends that the procedure is unnecessary and amounts
to abuse.
"Parents are free to practice their religion and to
have religious beliefs, but they are not free to change
the physical body of their child at will," the
anti-circumcision group's executive director, John
Geisheker, told The New York Sun.
Mr. Boldt contends that his son wants to have the
circumcision done. However, Mr. Geisheker said it is
impossible to know whether the son's choice is being
made freely.
In court papers, Mr. Geisheker's
group has argued that male circumcision should not be
permitted on constitutional grounds because many states
have passed laws banning female genital mutilation.
Though studies have shown less incidence of sexually
transmitted disease in circumcised men, Mr. Geisheker
contends that circumcision is "non-therapeutic." He
said it is akin to an increasingly trendy procedure
where women have the appearance of their vaginas
altered.
"Would you allow your 12-year-old daughter to have her
labia trimmed for cosmetic reasons?" he asked.
The Jewish groups warned that a decision blocking the
circumcision would encourage litigation over all sorts
of medical procedures for children. "Surely a parent
has the same authority to have a child's vision
corrected or a birthmark on his face removed even if
those procedures are also elective and even if the
other parent objects," they wrote. "The Jewish experience with
circumcision has shown that it is a safe and simple
procedure with few complications."
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