Circumcision Ban Seen as Threat to Jewish Life
Richard Prasquier, the French Jewish leader, said that banning circumcision in Europe “would inevitably mean the end of Judaism” there.
“You can seek a ban but you need to understand the consequences: The inevitable disappearance of Jewish life from Europe,” Prasquier said on Thursday during a European Parliament conference on religious freedoms.
Pasquier is the president of the CRIF umbrella body. France has Europe’s largest Jewish community, numbering about 500,000.
The conference, “Freedom of Religion and/or Mutual Respect in Europe,” was jointly organized by the European Parliament and the European Jewish Association.
Prasquier said attacking circumcision “is telling Europe’s Jews to pack their suitcases and leave” and that includes “Orthodox, traditional or non-observant such as myself.”
He was replying to a question by Diane Luquiser, one of the conference’s 50 participants, who asked why Judaism could not “adapt to modern times” and abandon the practice “which hurts children.”
Prasquier revealed he was circumcised 11 years after his birth in Poland in 1945.
“Circumcising me was a difficult decision for my father, a Polish who had to drop his pants when the Nazis caught him,” he said. “That kind of difficulty is a reality which we would not like to see repeating itself.”
Rabbi Menachem Margolin, director of the European Jewish Association – the Brussels-based organization that organized the conference – said allowing Jewish and Muslim rites is “necessary for mutual respect.”
Over the past year, ritual circumcision of underage boys had been briefly banned in a Swiss hospital and in some Austrian hospitals after a court in Cologne ruled in June that such circumcision amounted to a criminal offense.
Last month, her cabinet passed a draft law to permit circumcision and clarify the legal situation.
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