Iceland could become first country to ban male circumcision
The legislation being debated by Iceland's Parliament
would impose a six-year jail term on anyone who
"removes part or all of (a child's) sexual organs" for
non-medical reasons.
"It's an attack on freedom of religion," Ahmad
Seddeeq, the Egyptian-born imam of the Islamic Cultural Center of Iceland, said
Monday.
Silja Dögg Gunnarsdóttir, a lawmaker from the center-right
Progressive Party, said she proposed the measure after realizing the
country's ban on female genital mutilation had no equivalent to
prevent male circumcision.
Iceland outlawed female genital mutilation in 2005, in line with
other nations, to prevent procedures that intentionally alter or injure
female genital organs for non-medical reasons.
"We are talking about children's rights, not about freedom
of belief," she said when she introduced the bill in early
February. "Everyone has the right to believe in what they want, but
the rights of children come above the right to believe."
About 336,000 people live in Iceland, including 250 Jews and 1,500
Muslims, according to government statistics and Seddeeq.
This Nordic island nation is known for progressive legislation
on gender equality. Last month, the government made it illegal for companies to
pay women less than men did — another world first.
The religious ritual of male circumcision, or removing the
foreskin from the penis, generally occurs shortly after birth, during childhood
or around puberty as a rite of passage. Jews and Muslims typically
circumcise their sons to confirm or mark their relationship with God.
While the practice is often associated with Judaism, a 2007
report by the World Health Organization said Muslims are the largest religious
group to perform male circumcision. An estimated 30% of all males
globally are circumcised, and about two-thirds of them are Muslim, the
organization said.
In the United States, 98% of Jewish men are circumcised,
according to the world agency. The organization also said there is substantial
evidence that male circumcision protects against diseases, such as urinary
tract infections, syphilis, invasive penile cancer and HIV.
In Iceland, Gunnarsdóttir's draft law has political support
in Parliament and popular backing. But religious leaders around Europe worry
that Iceland's quest to protect children is trampling on religious practices
and could amount to anti-Semitism and Islamophobia.
"Protecting the health of children is a legitimate goal of
every society, but in this case (it is being used) without any scientific
basis, to stigmatize certain religious
communities," said Cardinal Reinhard Marx, president of the Brussels-based
Catholic Church in the European Union.
Milah U.K., a British group that protects the Jewish community's
right carry out religious circumcision, said, "For a country such as
Iceland, that considers itself a liberal democracy, to ban it, thus making
sustainable Jewish life in the country impossible, is extremely
concerning."
Seddeeq pointed out that native-born Icelanders are not
circumcised, and he is not aware of any medical specialists in the country
trained to perform the procedure. He took his own 3-year-old son to Egypt to
have it done.
"What's the point in banning something that doesn't really
exist?" he said.
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