It just doesn't cut it
Tali Farkash
Growing trend not to circumcise Jewish babies less
worrying than fact ritual has become meaningless to
seculars
Every once in a while the dilemma arises again, when
a new baby is born to a secular couple. The debate
usually opens with a text message from the exhausted
new parents reporting that – mazal tov! – a
healthy son was born. The aunt has already decided what
to wear, the uncle is waiting anxiously for the call
that would inform him of where the act, or more
precisely – the cut – is to take place, but
so far no word – nada.
After waiting three days, the aunt picks up the courage
to call the new grandma to inquire what's holding
things back. "Is the baby okay? Does he have jaundice?"
everything is fine, the grandmother replies, but the
couple has decided not to circumcise the baby.
This gives the cue for the onslaught to begin. The
cousin who's a med student sends the parents a pile of
studies claiming that uncircumcised babies are exposed
to various, terrible illnesses; the aunt warns the new
mom that the child would suffer embarrassment at the
nursery's toilet and at the communal shower in the
army.
But the new parents insist: Yes to a party, but no to a
brit.
Honestly? It's about time. Just like any other Jewish
act – namely a mitzvah, and what’s more a
mitzvah that involves inflicting pain on a helpless
eight-day-old baby – the brit milah has also arrived
at a crossroads. And against all criticism and warnings,
the decision to give it a pass is becoming increasingly
trendy in Israel.
Circumcision for all the wrong reasons
"I've managed to stand up to the religious,
overbearing establishment," is an old, familiar motto.
Only this time, instead of getting married in Cyprus or
holding a non-religious funeral at a kibbutz, we've
decided to keep the boy in one piece, without
performing "barbaric" incisions in his body. What's
wrong with that? We have here caring, well-informed
parents who are unwilling to swallow every nonsensical
argument that an over-zealous circumciser tries to
shove down their throat at the neonatal ward.
And even I, a mitzvah observing person, don't have a
problem with the ever-rising number of uncircumcised
Israelis. It is beyond my powers to try and explain to
people how much this ritual is imbued with meaning and
speak poetically about its spiritual virtues. I don't
see myself preaching against the dangerous decline of
Jewish values over the Knesset podium, like many
religious MKs.
Unfortunately the bottom line is that it doesn't matter
whether the boy was circumcised due to health concerns
or because his parents wanted to make sure he'd fit in
with the other kids in kindergarten. The moment that
the brit has been taken out of its religious context
and became a social act that declares one's belonging
to a group, instead of a covenant between God and his
children, it has lost its true and appropriate role
– at least in my view.
I am much more concerned by the fact that many in
Israel feel that their Jewishness is an unwelcomed
burden - a redundant, meaningless piece of information.
Just a trick of the universe that has landed them in
the bosom of an ancient, long-suffering nation. They
therefore choose to have the brit without ceremony, or
blessings or a minyan. Just make the cut and get it
over with, much like the many who choose not to
circumcise their sons at all. And it is indeed a
circumcision, but certainly not a brit – a
covenant.
Choosing not to perform the brit ceremony (with or
without circumcision) is a natural symptom for the
alienation from the ritual's true purpose. From this
standpoint it becomes very easy to decide to give the
thing up entirely, because "there is no covenant
between me and anyone up there." Sadly, no shiny party
with a buffet, jamboree and a famous circumciser could
stitch together this spiritual cut.
And if you ask me, this is the cut that hurts the
most.
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