[Their quandary is indicative of the
confusion that has been sown by the ruling on June 26 by a court in Cologne
that, while not enforceable outside that region, has sent ripples of anger and
anxiety throughout the country and beyond. It has raised vexing questions about
the boundaries of religious practice and freedom in an increasingly secular Germany.]
By Melissa Eddy
Gordon Welters for the International Herald Tribune
Muhsin Sapci and his wife, Gonca, do not know how, or where, to have their 4-year-old
son, Asil, circumcised |
But since a German court’s ruling that equated circumcision with bodily harm — and a criminal act
— many hospitals across the nation have stopped performing the procedure. The
Sapcis are determined to have their son, Asil, who turns 4 this month,
circumcised, but they do not know where to go.
“Right now
everything is controlled, most people go to a doctor and the child is covered
by insurance,” Mr. Sapci said. “If they try to outlaw it, it will still be
done, but differently, and that could have consequences.”
Their quandary
is indicative of the confusion that has been sown by the ruling on June 26 by a
court in Cologne that, while not
enforceable outside that region, has sent ripples of anger and anxiety
throughout the country and beyond. It has raised vexing questions about the
boundaries of religious practice and freedom in an increasingly secular Germany.
“The often very
aggressive prejudice against religion as backward, irrational and opposed to
science is increasingly defining popular opinion,” said Michael Bongardt, a
professor of ethics from Berlin’s Free University who added that the ruling
reflected a profound lack of understanding in modern Germany for religious
belief.
Jewish and
Muslim organizations convened this week in Berlin
and Brussels to protest the ruling
vigorously, and they said they had been inundated with calls from confused
parents. The German Medical Association condemned the ruling for potentially
putting children at risk by taking the procedure out of the hands of doctors,
but it also warned surgeons not to perform circumcisions for religious reasons
until legal clarity was established.
On Friday, as
the outcry intensified, the issue reached the highest levels of the German
government. Chancellor Angela Merkel’s spokesman said that discussions were
under way between the chancellor’s aides and the justice and other ministries
to find a legal solution that would protect the right to perform ritual
circumcisions.
“It is urgently
necessary that we establish legal certainty,” said the spokesman, Steffen
Seibert. “It is clear this cannot be put on the back burner. Freedom to
practice religion is a cherished legal principle.”
Germany’s
Justice Ministry is “carefully examining” the ruling and will decide what, if
any, consequences are necessary, including the possibility of proposing
legislation, said Mareke Aden, a ministry spokeswoman. But she warned that
because the ruling involves opposing constitutional rights, a review would take
time.
The
condemnation has also come from abroad, including from the American Jewish Committee and the Simon Wiesenthal Center. Germany ’s
ambassador to Israel
was called before a parliamentary committee to explain the ruling. Guido
Westerwelle, Germany ’s
foreign minister, said Friday that he had been showered with questions and
criticism surrounding the ruling.
“They are all
greatly concerned about the ramifications of the ruling, but mostly for Jewish
and Muslim life in Germany ,”
Mr. Westerwelle said. There are 100,000 Jews and four million Muslims living
here.
Early on, Mr.
Westerwelle tried to calm the storm, by insisting that “Germany
is an open, tolerant country, where religious freedom is firmly anchored and
where religious traditions, such as circumcision, are protected as an
expression of religious pluralism.”
The reality has
been less clear-cut. Bans on circumcision have existed throughout history, from
ancient Roman and Greek times to the Soviet era last century. And while the Cologne
court did not ban the practice and acquitted the doctor who performed a
procedure that resulted in complications, it found that “the right of parents
to raise their children in a religion does not override the right of a child to
bodily integrity.”
That such a
ruling would come from a court in modern, post-World War II Germany
has caused many to wonder whether the judges were fully aware of the
implications and would have ruled differently had the case involved a Jewish
boy, instead of a young Muslim. The boy in question was 4 years old.
“I can’t
imagine Berlin prosecutors
ordering the police to enter a synagogue and arrest a Jew with a beard and
yarmulke for carrying out a circumcision,” said Josh Spinner, an American rabbi
who moved to Berlin 12 years ago
and who now runs the Ronald S. Lauder Foundation. “Those are pictures that I
don’t believe anyone here is ready for.”
After their
meeting in Brussels this week,
Muslim and Jewish leaders issued a
joint statement calling
on the German government to take action to defend the practice. “Circumcision
is an ancient ritual that is fundamental to our individual faiths, and we
protest in the strongest possible terms this court ruling,” it said.
Since the
ruling, at least three ritual circumcisions have been performed in Berlin ’s
Jewish community, Mr. Spinner said. One was on the infant son of a 33-year-old
man who moved to Germany
from the former Soviet Union in the 1990s, during an immigration wave of mostly Eastern European Jews
who have helped the Jewish community here swell to more than 100,000.
“The
circumcision was planned because it was eight days after his birth, the time
was right,” said the boy’s father, who did not want to give his name for fear
that he could face legal charges. “We did it because we had to do it.”
For the Sapcis,
circumcising Asil is seen as both a practical step and a rite of passage. Mr.
Sapci said he, too, was circumcised at age 4 in Turkey
in a traditional celebration that is viewed among Turks as a boy’s first step
toward becoming a man.
“To call
circumcision into question is idiotic,” Ms. Sapci said. “Just as washing your
face, your hands and behind your ears is a ritual in Islam, so is circumcision.”
ETHNIC CLEANSING IN MYANMAR
[The current violence can be traced to the rape and killing in late May of a Buddhist woman, for which the police reportedly detained three Muslims. That was followed by mob attacks on Rohingyas and other Muslims that killed dozens of people. According to Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch, state security forces have now conducted mass arrests of Muslims; they destroyed thousands of homes, with the impact falling most heavily on the Rohingyas. Displaced Rohingyas have tried to flee across the Naf River to neighboring Bangladesh ; some have died in the effort.]
By Moshahida Sultana Ritu
Cruelty toward the Rohingyas is not new. They have faced
torture, neglect and repression in the Buddhist-majority land since it achieved
independence in 1948. Its constitution closes all options for Rohingyas to be
citizens, on grounds that their ancestors didn’t live there when the land, once
called Burma , came under British rule in the 19th century (a contention
the Rohingyas dispute). Even now, as military rulers have begun to loosen their
grip, there is no sign of change for the Rohingyas. Instead, the Burmese are trying
to cast them out.
The current violence can be traced to the rape and killing
in late May of a Buddhist woman, for which the police reportedly detained three
Muslims. That was followed by mob attacks on Rohingyas and other Muslims that
killed dozens of people. According to Amnesty International and Human Rights
Watch, state security forces have now conducted mass arrests of Muslims; they
destroyed thousands of homes, with the impact falling most heavily on the
Rohingyas. Displaced Rohingyas have tried to flee across the Naf River to neighboring Bangladesh ; some have died in the effort.
The Burmese media have cited early rioting by Rohingyas and
have cast them as terrorists and traitors. In mid-June, in the name of stopping
such violence, the government declared a state of emergency. But it has used
its border security force to burn houses, kill men and evict Rohingyas from
their villages. And on Thursday, President Thein Sein suggested that Myanmar could end the crisis by expelling all of its Rohingyas or
by having the United Nations resettle them — a proposal that a United Nations
official quickly rejected.
This is not sectarian violence; it is state-supported
ethnic cleansing, and the nations of the world aren’t pressing Myanmar ’s leaders to stop it. Even Ms. Aung San Suu Kyi has not
spoken out.
In mid-June, after some Rohingyas fled by boat to villages
in Bangladesh , they told horrifying stories to a team of journalists
whom I accompanied to this city near the border. They said they had come under
fire from a helicopter and that three of six boats were lost. Some children
drowned during the four-day trip; others died of hunger. Once in Bangladesh , they said, the families faced deportation back to Myanmar . But some children who had become separated from their
parents made their way to the houses of villagers for shelter; other children
may even now be starving in hide-outs or have become prey for criminal
networks. Border guards found an abandoned newborn on a boat; after receiving
medical treatment, the infant was left in the temporary care of a local
fisherman.
Why isn’t this pogrom arousing more international
indignation? Certainly, Myanmar has become a destination for capital investment
now that the United States, the European Union and Canada have accepted the
government’s narrative of democratic transition and have largely lifted
the economic sanctions they
began applying after 1988 (measures that did not prevent China, India, South
Korea, Thailand, Singapore and multinational oil companies from doing business
with the Burmese). Still, when Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton
visited Myanmar late last year and welcomed its first steps toward
democratization, she also set down conditions for strengthening ties, including
an end to ethnic violence.
The plight of the Rohingyas begins with their statelessness
— the denial of citizenship itself, for which Myanmar is directly responsible. Ms. Aung San Suu Kyi, though not
as powerful as the military officers who control Myanmar’s transition, should
not duck questions about the Rohingyas, as she has done while being feted in
the West. Instead, she should be using her voice and her reputation to point
out that citizenship is a basic right of all humans. On July 5, the secretary
general of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation, Ekmeleddin Ihsanoglu,appealed to her to speak up to help end the violence.
To be sure, Bangladesh can do more. Its river border with Myanmar is unprotected; thousands of Rohingyas have been rowing or
swimming it at night. But even though Bangladesh has sheltered such refugees in the past — hundreds of
thousands of Rohingyas live here now, legally or illegally — it has been
reluctant so far this year to welcome them, out of fear of encouraging an
overwhelming new influx. Already, such fears have aroused anti-Rohingya
sentiment among some Bangladeshis, and initially Bangladesh ’s government tried to force the refugees back without
assisting them. After some villagers risked arrest by sheltering refugees in
their homes, the government began to offer humanitarian aid, before sending
them back on their boats. Bangladesh should shelter the refugees as it has in years past, as
the international community is urging.
But the world should be putting its spotlight on Myanmar . It should not so eagerly welcome democracy in a country
that leaves thousands of stateless men and women floating in a river, their
corpses washing up on its shores, after they have been reviled in, and driven
from, a land in which their families have lived for centuries.
Moshahida Sultana Ritu, an economist,
teaches at the University of Dhaka, in Bangladesh .
@ The New York Times
@ The New York Times