Sacred ritual or genital mutilation?
Friday, July 18, 2008
The Oregonian
Cara Ungar-Gutierrez's decision not to circumcise
her son Enzo ("Circumcision: a painful decision,"
How We Live section, July 17) is her own to make;
however, I seriously question her rationale that it was
"the most Jewish decision I could make."
If her sense of a "Jewish decision" is the tradition
of asking challenging questions about every aspect of
the religion and life, she might have a point. However,
the act of circumcision is a ritual deeply embedded in
the Jewish soul, marking Abraham's covenant with God
and with the Jewish people.
Those who have attended a bris milah ceremony can
confirm that the crying that Ungar-Gutierrez would have
felt uncomfortable with is momentary and the ritual is
gentle and joyful.
The alternative for Enzo is, if he chooses a Jewish
life, to circumcise as an adult. What it means to be
Jewish is complicated even for devout Jews.
Communicating it to a Gentile world is a challenge.
Your articles fell short of the mark.
STEPHEN SIRKIN Clackamas
I just read the interview with Cara Ungar-Gutierrez
and I have tears in my eyes. As a Jewish woman and the
mother of two college-age daughters, I thought back to
the time of my pregnancy with my first daughter. We did
not know if we were having a boy or a girl but I had
decided that if I had a boy, he would not be
circumcised. This choice caused much anger in my family
and my then-husband's family.
I have always been of the belief that I do not have
the right to permanently alter my child's body with a
cosmetic procedure and that the presence or lack of
foreskin is not what makes a boy Jewish.
Thank you to Ungar-Gutierrez for her strength and
compassion. She is truly an inspiration to intactivist
parents everywhere.
TABITHA vonKUHLMANN North Portland Editor's note: An
"intactivist" is "a person who participates in an
activist group or as an individual for the rights of
children to remain genitally intact,"
www.urbandictionary.com.
Religious circumcision be damned. Let's get real and
call it for what it is: genital mutilation without
anesthesia, inflicted upon a helpless human being
without his consent.
What galls me is the lack of public outrage,
especially by feminists who vehemently oppose female
circumcision. Genital mutilation is a barbaric practice
and should be banned.
STEVEN BERESFORD Camas, Wash.
The first rule in medical ethics is patient autonomy.
Before physicians can perform any "elective" procedure,
they must provide "informed consent." In performing
infant circumcision this is impossible because the
owner of the penis has no ability to have input into
the decision process.
This is the main reason that I quit doing
circumcisions about 15 years ago.
DAVID R. GRUBE, M.D. Family physician Philomath
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