Phony New York Times Trend Story Touts ‘Jewish Parents’ Avoiding Circumcision

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The New York Times is, alas, at it again, this time with a 1,500-word article headlined “When Jewish Parents Decide Not To Circumcise.”

It’s not at all clear why the Times finds this newsworthy to such an extent, or even at all. The story provides no statistics or data indicating that circumcision is on the decline among “Jewish parents.” In fact, the Times concedes, “Rabbis and public health experts interviewed said that the great majority of Jewish parents still circumcise.” That raises the question of why those who do not do so are worthy of a long and respectful Times treatment, or whether it’s just another phony Times trend story, like “women who dye their armpit hair” or “modern people who wear monocles.”

There are only two anecdotes in the Times article, and not a single one involves a child that has two “Jewish parents” on the scene.

The lead anecdote involves the child of Dana Edell, 41, who “is raising her son as a single mother” and “decided not to circumcise.” The Times story doesn’t say anything about the father of this child. It doesn’t report whether he is or was Jewish, or whether he had any part in the decision on circumcision. This is relevant, because under Jewish law, it’s the father’s obligation, not the mother’s, to circumcise the child. If the father doesn’t do it, the responsibility devolves to the local Jewish court of law.

The second anecdote is anonymous. It involves:

A 46-year-old father who asked to be identified only as Aaron because he was discussing intimate details about his son said he was surprised by how powerfully he felt about circumcising….

Aaron’s wife, who is not Jewish and grew up in a country where circumcision was not the norm, was opposed to it. She did not want to inflict pain on her newborn baby. The decision became “the hardest thing my wife and I have ever had to deal with,” Aaron said.

Ultimately, eight months into his wife’s pregnancy, Aaron agreed not to circumcise their son.

“I didn’t want it to end our marriage and tear apart our family,” he said.

A more accurate Times headline, in other words, would have been, “When a Non-Jewish Mother Decides Not To Circumcise” or “When a Single Mother Decides Not to Circumcise.”

The Times acknowledges that the “practice is rooted in Genesis, when God instructs Abraham to circumcise himself and all of his descendants as a sign of their contract with God.”

That doesn’t quite do the biblical passage full justice. Genesis 17:14 also states of those descendants of Abraham who are not circumcised that their souls will be cut off from their people, and their covenant invalidated. The Mishnah lists failing to circumcise a son as one of 36 offenses that merit the biblical punishment of karet, or being cut off from the people.

Nor does the Times quite capture — or even mention — the emphatic nature of other Jewish sources in favor of the commandment, or mitzvah, of circumcision. The Babylonian Talmud discusses it in the book of Nedarim, pages 31b to 32a — “So great is the mitzvah of circumcision that if not for it the Holy One, Blessed be He, would not have created His world… Rabbi Yehoshua ben Korḥa says: So great is the mitzvah of circumcision that all the merits that Moses our teacher accrued when he performed mitzvot did not protect him when he was negligent about performing the mitzvah of circumcision, as it is stated: ‘And the Lord met him and sought to kill him’ (Exodus 4:24)… so great is the mitzvah of circumcision that it is equal to all the mitzvot of the Torah.”

The Babylonian Talmud also addresses the matter in Shabbat 137b: “Were it not for the covenant of circumcision … the world would cease to exist.”

Whatever the source of the Times’ apparent hostility to Jewish ritual circumcision — whether it stems from a general hostility to religious ritual overall, or from a particular animus directed specifically at traditional Judaism — it’s unseemly. One might hope the Times would simply “cut it out,” but that would risk veering into a category of humor better avoided.

The hostility to the Jewish ritual, by the way, is shared by a substantial number of Times readers, at least to judge by the comments accompanying the online version of the article. One comment describing circumcision as “a cruel bronze-age practice to inflict upon an unwitting child” was up-voted with a thumbs-up recommendation by at least 59 Times readers. The second-most-popular reader comment, recommended by at least 34 Times readers, opined, “It is preposterous that, in this day and age, it is even an open question — for Jews or anyone else — whether it is appropriate for a parent to lop off part of her or his son’s body as an expression of the parent’s belief system.”

(C) 2017 . The Algemeiner      .       Ira Stoll

 

{Matzav.com}

 


9 COMMENTS

  1. Hostile hate.

    Yireh says we watch the enemy. It wants another holocaust.

    The circumcision ritual has been now attacked much this past decade. Watch the terror.

    Am I silly to think the same mind that refuses circumcision would support transgender gender “reassignment” surgery. I would bet they do.

    Cork it all.

  2. The New York Slime is more and more detached from reality as it moves further and further to the left. Evenually, it will fall off the cliff, and shut down forever.

  3. The child with the non-Jewish mother would not make him Jewish with a circumcision in any event. Why bother?

    And the single mother might very well be single because she went off the derech or is not Jewish. The Times are hiding these details to denigrate Jews as is their general practice.

  4. I don’t even know why the New York Slimes would even have access to such personal information unless the people involved called them to tell them. If I had a new baby how would The N.Y.T. know about it and if I planned a bris or not. Why should such things be in the news?

  5. The Ochs who runs the New York Times is a goy. However, his double last name points to his Jewish ancestry. He will do absolutely anything to distance himself and his fishwrap from any possibility of being considered even a half-Jew, including his constant “running of the bull” in print. That has been the policy of a once-great newspaper for over a century.

  6. Pro-vaccine “Rabbbis” are endengering jewish circumsicsion .Anyone against religious exemptions, is undermining our religious freedom .

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