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Nathan Lopes Cardozo

Circumcision: Why risk your child’s well-being? A call to all Israelis

Monuments of stone may disappear; acts of commitment to God, ethics, or Jewish identity resound forever
Illustrative: A baby after the brit milah ceremony (Gershon Elinson/Flash90)
Illustrative: A baby after the brit milah ceremony (Gershon Elinson/Flash90)

Thousands of years ago, the Greeks tried to bring an end to Judaism and, thereby, to the Jewish people and the Jewish homeland. They did this by prohibiting Jews from circumcising their 8-day-old baby boys. Recently  (May 6, 2017), the Progress Party in Norway voted in favor of a law banning ritual circumcision of children under the age of 16. The so-called reason: “violation of children’s rights,” and “mental and physical harm” to the child.

This was done a day after the environment committee of Belgium’s Parliament of Wallonia voted in favor of banning shechita (kosher ritual slaughter). In both cases, these verdicts, although not yet implemented by the Norwegian and Belgian governments, are a serious attempt to ban Jews not only from these countries but from all of Europe.

In 2013, the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE) recommended to all its 47 member states to ban circumcision.

Throughout thousands of years, we Jews have become used to these attacks. We realize that much of this was and is motivated by anti-Semitism and a great amount of ignorance. We laughed it off and went our way, knowing that nothing or nobody in this world could force us to stop circumcising our children. We were well aware that giving this up would bring an end to our people and Judaism.  So, no self-respecting Jew would lend a hand to these ill-conceived attacks.

Lately, however, some Israeli Jews have joined these forces and even established websites such as “Gonen al haYeled” (protect the child) and organizations such as “Kahal” (a support group for parents of uncircumcised children, and undecided parents who want to consult with them). (See Jerusalem Post Friday Magazine,21.12.2017.)  While the number of uncircumcised children in Israel is very minimal, the fact that these groups have been established is a worrisome phenomenon.

It is impossible to argue with anti-Semites, since hate is all they know, and no reasoning will change their minds. On the other hand, it is most important to realize that many well-meaning Jews (and gentiles) are deeply influenced by so-called ‘humanitarian’ considerations and begin wondering whether they are, after all, justified.

Indeed, there is a valid question to be asked. Is it not an infringement on the rights of a child who never consented to this intervention? And, in truth, is it not a harmful and traumatic experience? Perhaps all the parties who want to ban circumcision are right, after all?

What these well-meaning people, especially Jews, have to realize is that the whole premise on which these objections are based is the result of a profound misunderstanding of what human beings are all about, what moves them, and what makes their lives meaningful.

To be truly alive is possible only when one lives for some supreme goal. The ultimate question regarding our lives is whether there is anything worth dying for. If the answer is no, then we must ask ourselves whether there is anything to live for. For most thinking people, there is more to life than our physical survival, or having a great time. It is the exaltation of existence and the ability to hear a perpetual murmur emitted by the waves beyond the shore of worldliness that give us the feeling of life’s utmost significance. If not for that, we would agree with French philosopher and novelist Albert Camus who said that the only serious philosophical problem is whether or not to commit suicide.

There are values in life that surpass our concern for the mundane, and many of us are prepared to make highly uncomfortable and even painful sacrifices in order to live by those values. It is these sacrifices that give our lives a notion of belonging, of being part of something much larger than the sum of the components that make up our physical existence.

We ask: What gives us the right to bring a child into a religious covenant, by way of circumcision, without its consent? Circumcision, after all, is the very sign of belonging to the Jewish people. And to be Jewish means to be part of a nation that is rooted in a covenant that asks Jews to risk their very existence for the sake of a moral and religious mission – to redeem humankind from its moral setbacks and to offer it hope. How can we commit children to a lifelong mission that they may not wish to fulfill? Fair questions, indeed.

But shouldn’t we really ask a different question, one that many of us do not want to face? What right do we have to bring children into the world without giving them a higher mission? Is there anything more heartless than giving birth to children and not letting them know why they live? What right do we have to throw children into this turbulent jungle, filling them with anxieties and uncertainties, without giving them a clue as to their higher purpose? While Socrates explained that life without thinking is not worth living, Judaism teaches us that a life without commitment is a life not lived. The dignity of a person is in direct proportion to their obligations (A.J. Heschel). All human beings, Jews and gentiles alike, need to teach their children a strong commitment to a meaningful purpose beyond the mere mundane, and more than just the pleasure principle.

To deny our children this opportunity is to withhold from them real joy and the capability to withstand major challenges, as well as the chance to experience the highest, truest value of living in this world. Joy is “man’s passage from a less to a greater perfection,” said Baruch Spinoza (Ethics) . But it is only through hardship and discomfort that one can achieve such perfection.

Surely children will always have the opportunity to reject the individual missions chosen for them by their parents and replace them with other callings. Yet, of invaluable importance is that their parents made them aware of the fact that without a mission life is not worth living.

When we object to circumcision on the basis of child mutilation (a description completely disproportionate to the small incision that takes only a few seconds, heals within hours, and has no serious consequences) and denying the child’s right to autonomy over his body, it could seem that we are making a valid claim. Indeed, by what right are we, as parents, allowed to do so?

But shouldn’t we also ask ourselves honestly whether we have the right to bring a child into this world at all? Is that not a much greater injustice than circumcision?

No doubt, even with today’s advanced medical knowledge, many children are tragically born with all sorts of deformities or illnesses, often crippled and handicapped for life. Others may suffer at some other stage in life, contracting diseases, experiencing violence, and even becoming victims of war and other atrocities.

Has anyone, before planning birth, ever asked their future child for consent to be born? Should we ban all future pregnancies and births, as we now want to do with circumcision?

Subconsciously, we all know that we have the right to bring a child into the world because there is something about life that overrules all objections against it. If we would not believe this, it would be completely prohibited to risk bringing children into the world knowing full well how much harm and pain they will most probably encounter. “To live is like to love – all reason is against it, and all healthy instinct for it,” as Samuel Butler humorously said (Samuel Butler’s Notebooks, 1951).

Only if we understand that life is of invaluable importance – and not merely a matter of physical survival – can we live a life of grand spiritual import.

One of the greatest tragedies of modern times is that millions of people live and die without ever being aware that there is supreme meaning to their lives.

Closely related to this is the issue of rights and duties. Western society is rights-oriented, and secular ethics are deeply rooted in this. One of the great contributions that Judaism, and to a certain extent other religious denominations, made to this world is the concept of duty. This is an essential distinction that cuts across many issues. Judaism does not believe that people own their bodies and are therefore free to do with them whatever they please. Judaism and most monotheistic religions believe that the human body is a loan granted by God Who is the ultimate Owner.

Parents, therefore, have the responsibility to convey to their children a purpose in life, which must reflect the notion of obligation. For the same reason, it is not a human right to bring children into the world; it is a duty. If it is seen as merely a right, what happens when the rights of the parents clash with those of the child? When parents abort a healthy fetus because they have the right to do so, are they not violating the right of the child to be born?

The rite of circumcision is the Jews’ way of passing on life’s meaning to their children by obligating them to fulfill the Jewish people’s covenant with God, sealed thousands of years ago. It is duty we talk about, and there is no growth except in the fulfillment of one’s duties.

For Jews, circumcision – the promise to live life with a great mission as its guide – is God’s seal imprinted on human flesh. And it is only proper that this sign of allegiance be imposed upon the body, for after all, it is not the soul that needs to make the commitment. The soul is already committed to its mission. It is the body – the very instrument through which man carries his soul, his constant companion, enabling him to live a life of nobility – that makes a vow to compel itself to serve God.

Like a piece of paper that carries the buying power of a certain dollar amount, the body serves as the vessel that holds the soul. Just as the symbolic markings on the bill inform us of the value assigned to it by the treasury department, so too does the ‘sign’ that parents inscribe on the bodies of their children reveal the greatness of the souls they house.

Since Judaism strongly believes in action and the physical, not only in faith and spirituality, the transient act of baptizing with water is insufficient. Judaism wants the body to be transformed. And if the body fails to live up to its lofty responsibilities, the physical imprint of the circumcision serves as a constant reminder of what it means to reside in the presence of God; it is a testimony to one’s spiritual obligations and potential. The claim that it may hurt for a moment, and that it interferes with the child’s self-determination, is totally disproportionate to its infinite spiritual value. The child, from the very beginning of his life, is physically and symbolically reminded that living a life of higher meaning requires sacrifice but is also the source of both ultimate happiness and the notion of mission.

To say that women are party to the covenant only in a secondary way because they do not undergo circumcision, is like saying that American citizenship applies only to those who fly the stars and stripes on their flagpoles, everyone else being a second-class citizen (J.D. Levenson, The New Enemies of Circumcision, Commentary , March 2000).

Medical science has not yet determined whether circumcision has medical advantages. It all depends on which school of thought you ask, and many medical opinions on the subject are driven by opposing agendas. Arguing about this is missing the point. Circumcision has nothing to do with medical advantages. It has to do with the meaning of life and its higher purpose.

But what about all the Jews who are no longer religious and have abandoned Judaism? Why should they continue to circumcise their children?

It is as if the earlier mentioned, famous arch-critic of Judaism, Baruch Spinoza, answered this question: “The sign of circumcision is, I think, so important that I could persuade myself that it alone would preserve the nation forever” (A Theologico – Political Treatise).   What this great philosopher was arguing is that Jews may reject Shabbat, kashrut and Judaism at large, but as long as they circumcise their children, they will preserve their nation from utter oblivion, because they realize that it stands at the core of Jewishness and represents a good deal more than just a religious rite or the belief in God.

Circumcision is an event that exists as a moment in the past, yet extends into the present. From a human perspective, circumcision happens just once; but from the perspective of mission, the message conveyed by this act – the Jewish nation’s unwavering commitment either to God, ethics, or Jewishness – resounds forever. Monuments of stone may disappear; acts of the spirit will never vanish.

From a religious perspective, at the time of circumcision, parents imprint God’s seal on the body of their child, thus bringing him into the covenant with God and human meaning. From that moment, the child begins his journey on the road of commitment to holiness which, although not yet known to him, is the most challenging and rewarding mission life can offer – to become a servant of God and a blessing to all nations.

As Spinoza, who had left all Jewishness, so correctly observed, circumcision is the secret to the miracle of Jewish survival. What those Jews who oppose circumcision should never forget is that the attempt to outlaw this rite may not just make Jewish life impossible, but would probably end all Jewish existence. In fact, it is a call to end the State of Israel as the national homeland of the Jewish people. This would be more than tragic. It would bring an end to all the great contributions to civilization that Jews have made throughout the thousands of years, and still do, thanks to the State of Israel. These contributions are grossly disproportionate to its world population and are most miraculous. To abandon circumcision is not only to undermine the very existence of the Jewish people and the State of Israel; it is also a great injustice to all of humankind.

As Winston Churchill once said, “Some people like Jews and some do not; but no thoughtful man can doubt the fact that they are beyond all question the most formidable and the most remarkable race which has ever appeared in the world” (Illustrated Sunday Herald February 8, 1920).

The remarkable capacity of the Jewish nation to outlive all its enemies – from the Egyptians to the Greeks, Romans, Persians… and down to the Nazis – may quite well be the result of this small physical intervention. It takes a few seconds, but it creates eternity.

Let us never forget. That would be fatal.

Dear Friends,

Every week I receive hundreds of emails and important observations on my essays, via many channels. Unfortunately, the volume makes it impossible for me to respond to every comment. Please know that I deeply appreciate every comment, and learn from them all. Thank you for taking the time to share your comments. I hope you will continue to do so.
— Nathan Lopes Cardozo

About the Author
Rabbi Dr. Nathan Lopes Cardozo is the Founder and Dean of the David Cardozo Academy and the Bet Midrash of Avraham Avinu in Jerusalem. A sought-after lecturer on the international stage for both Jewish and non-Jewish audiences, Rabbi Cardozo is the author of 13 books and numerous articles in both English and Hebrew. Rabbi Cardozo heads a Think Tank focused on finding new Halachic and philosophical approaches to dealing with the crisis of religion and identity amongst Jews and the Jewish State of Israel. Hailing from the Netherlands, Rabbi Cardozo is known for his original and often fearlessly controversial insights into Judaism. His ideas are widely debated on an international level on social media, blogs, books and other forums.
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