Berlin to introduce law to allow circumcision
By GIL SHEFLER
07/10/2012 04:41
Andreas Michaelis tells Knesset c'tee legislation will seek to overturn court ruling which banned circumcision.
German Ambassador Andreas Michaelis Photo: Marc Israel Sellem/The Jerusalem Post
German Ambassador to Israel Andreas Michaelis told a Knesset committee on Monday
that Berlin will introduce legislation allowing circumcision to be practiced in
the country.
Speaking before the Immigration, Absorption and Diaspora
Affairs Committee, Michaelis said a law will be introduced overturning a recent
court ruling that banned circumcision in Cologne because it violates children’s
rights.
“Jewish life in Germany in the wake of the awful past events is
entirely different,” said Michaelis. “Obviously the ban on circumcision is more
sensitive in Germany than other places because of the Holocaust, but it’s
important to stress that the Jewish community in Germany is
growing.”
During the gathering, several lawmakers and community
representatives voiced their disapproval of the judge’s decision last
week.
MK Nissim Ze’ev (Shas) said his father, who was a mohel, or ritual
circumciser, in French-occupied Algeria, risked his life during World War II to
circumcise newborns.
“He traveled throughout [the Algerian city of] Oran
despite being in danger,” said the haredi lawmaker. “Why? Because for
generations we have laid down our lives to uphold our traditions.”
The
Conference of European Rabbis will hold an emergency meeting in Berlin this week
to discuss ways of repealing the ban, it said.
“The ruling in Cologne is
perhaps one of the gravest attacks on Jewish life in Europe in the
post-Holocaust world,” said Pinchas Goldschmidt, president of the Conference of
European Rabbis.
“The court utterly failed to consider how fundamental
brit mila is to the Jewish faith and identity – as the original and eternal
symbol of commitment to God.”