|
Canada
Debates Validity of Circumcision
TORONTO
(Reuters) - Canadian anti-circumcision crusaders are challenging
a law protecting women against genital mutilation as a way to
draw attention to much more common male circumcision.
The court
challenge led by Dr. Arif Bhimji has sparked a heated debate that
pits subscribers to modern human rights tenets against followers
of age-old religious traditions.
``We are saying
that this section is discriminatory because it provides protection
to females but it does not provide the same protection to males,''
said Bhimji, an emergency-room physician and a Muslim who heads
the anti-circumcision Association for Genital Integrity.
He argues
that the section of the criminal code concerning aggravated assault
violates the Canadian Charter on Rights and Freedoms, which guarantees
equality between the sexes.
Male circumcision
is common in North America and elsewhere for religious and cultural
reasons and is known to help prevent urinary tract infections,
sexually transmitted diseases and penile cancer, a rare condition.
In the minor surgical operation, the foreskin is removed, which
can help prevent bacteria from growing under the fold of skin.
Yet more is
at risk than most people think, said John Antonopoulos of the
Montreal-based Information Center on Circumcision. ``It is not
a small, useless piece of skin. There is a whole world of sensations
in the foreskin,'' he said, citing sensitive nerve connections
at the end of the penis.
A mandatory
practice in Islam and Judaism, circumcision was introduced to
Anglo-Saxon countries at the turn of the 19th century and expanded
in the 1950s as a way to improve hygiene. Experts say it was also
seen as a way to control sexual urges and reduce masturbation,
believed to cause mental illness.
Since the
1970s there has been an ongoing debate over its merits and the
Canadian Pediatric Society, like several medical associations
in the United States, Britain and Australia, said in 1996 that
newborns should not be routinely circumcised.
``There are
potential complications and it's not medically necessary,'' said
Dr. Debra Davis, a member of the Canadian Pediatric Society. In
2 to 10 percent of circumcisions minor complications such as bleeding,
infection and inflammation can occur and, more rarely, damage
to the penis can lead to amputation, she said.
Given those
concerns, she said there was a ``real push'' from the medical
community in the mid-1980s to decrease the rate of circumcision,
which fell to 60% from almost 90% in the United States and to
20% from 50% in Canada.
Davis said
no new medical evidence has arisen that would justify recommending
a return to circumcision. DIVINE COMMANDMENT OR CRUEL TREATMENT?
Bhimji said
medical associations failed to educate professionals on this delicate
matter. ``As a physician, I had an obligation to make sure that
we are protecting the most vulnerable in our society,'' he said.
``I am a Muslim,
so this is something I didn't take lightly, but I came to the
conclusion that just because it is a religious requirement it
doesn't give us an unfettered right to cause harm to our children.''
The view of
most human rights, children's aid and religious groups is that,
unlike female genital mutilation (FGM), male circumcision is not
a deliberate attempt to injure the child.
``Male circumcision
does have recognized medical benefits ... FGM in contrast was
never medically accepted and all colleges (of physicians and surgeons)
have banned the practice,'' said Carole Morency of Justice Canada.
Male circumcision
cannot be compared to female genital mutilation--often mistakenly
called female circumcision--which generally involves the complete
removal of female genitalia and poses serious health risks, Morency
said.
``We amended
the code in 1997 to avoid any uncertainty that the criminal law
in Canada does clearly prohibit the practice of FGM,'' she said,
rejecting Bhimji's argument that the section violates the Charter's
requirement of equality of treatment.
The Canadian
Jewish Congress immediately said it would oppose any court challenge
to the law.
``Circumcision
is a divine commandment. It's not an optional kind of thing and
it doesn't depend on logic,'' CJC communications director Rubin
Friedman said. If a child is not healthy, the only exception would
be delaying the rite, usually performed on the eighth day following
birth, he said.
If the court
challenge were accepted, he said, ``I think it would be a huge
issue.''
Reference
Source 89
For more information on how to prevent other diseases, use
PreventDisease.com's "Quick
Prevention Resources".
|