Difference between revisions of "Circumcision" - New World Encyclopedia

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[[Image:Circumcision set.jpg|right|thumb|Family circumcision set and trunk, ca. eighteenth century  
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[[Image:Circumcision set.jpg|right|thumb|250px|Family circumcision set and case, c. eighteenth century wooden box covered in cow hide with silver implements: Silver trays, clip, pointer, silver flask, spice vessel.]]
Wooden box covered in cow hide with silver implements: silver trays, clip, pointer, silver flask, spice vessel.]]
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Male '''Circumcision''' is a surgical procedure that removes some or all of the [[foreskin]] ([[prepuce]]) from the [[penis]]. The word "circumcision" comes from [[Latin]] ''circum'' (meaning "around") and ''caedere'' (meaning "to cut").
'''Circumcision''' is a surgical procedure that removes some or all of the [[foreskin]] ([[prepuce]]) from the [[penis]]. The word "circumcision" comes from [[Latin]] ''circum'' (meaning "around") and ''caedere'' (meaning "to cut").
 
  
Since March 2007, the World Health Organization and UNAIDS recognize male circumcision as an efficacious intervention for HIV prevention, while cautioning that male circumcision only provides partial protection and should not replace other interventions to prevent heterosexual transmission of HIV. According to WHO, 30 percent of men worldwide have had the procedure, mostly in countries where it is common for religious or cultural reasons.
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Circumcision predates recorded [[human history]], with depictions in [[stone-age]] [[cave drawing]]s and [[Ancient Egypt]]ian [[tomb]]s. Theories regarding it include that circumcision is a form of ritual [[sacrifice]] or offering, a health precaution, a sign of submission to a [[deity]], a rite of passage to adulthood, a mark of defeat or [[slavery]], or an attempt to alter [[aesthetics]] or [[Human sexuality|sexuality]].
  
Circumcision predates recorded [[human history]], with depictions in [[stone-age]] [[cave drawing]]s and [[Ancient Egypt]]ian [[tomb]]s. Theories include that circumcision is a form of ritual [[sacrifice]] or offering, a health precaution, a sign of submission to a [[deity]], a rite of passage to adulthood, a mark of defeat or [[slavery]], or an attempt to alter [[esthetics]] or [[Human sexuality|sexuality]].
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Male circumcision is a religious commandment in [[Judaism]], expected in [[Islam]], and customary in some [[Oriental Orthodox]] and other Christian churches in Africa. On the other hand, it is condemned as contrary to Christian practice for [[Gentile]] Christians by the [[Apostle Paul]] and some church councils. Circumcision is common in the Middle East, North America (U.S. and Canada), Australia, and parts of Africa and Asia, especially the [[Philippines]] and [[South Korea]]. According to the [[World Health Organization]] (WHO), 30 percent of men worldwide have had the procedure.
 
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{{toc}}
Male circumcision is a religious commandment in [[Judaism]], expected in [[Islam]], and customary in some [[Oriental Orthodox]] and other Christian churches in Africa. Circumcision is common in the Middle East,in north América (USA and Canada ),in Australia and parts of Africa and Asia.  
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Opponents condemn male infant circumcision as a human rights abuse and a [[genital modification and mutilation|genital mutilation]] similar to [[female genital cutting]], while [[circumcision advocacy|advocates of circumcision]] regard it as a worthwhile public health measure. Although the medical justification for circumcision remains controversial, since March 2007, the WHO and other international organizations recognize male circumcision as an efficacious intervention for [[HIV]] prevention, while cautioning that it only provides partial protection and should not replace other interventions to prevent the transmission of HIV.<ref>WHO, [http://www.who.int/mediacentre/news/statements/2006/s18/en/index.html Statement on Kenyan and Ugandan trial findings regarding male circumcision and HIV.] Retrieved October 9, 2007.</ref>
 
 
[[Genital integrity]] supporters condemn infant circumcision as a human rights abuse and a [[genital modification and mutilation|genital mutilation]] like [[female genital cutting]], while [[circumcision advocacy|advocates of circumcision]] like international organizations, like WHO, UNAIDS, UNICEF, UNFPA, World Bank, and NIAID regard it as a worthwhile public health measure, particularly in the control of HIV.
 
 
 
==Circumcision procedures==
 
[[Image:Uncircumcised Penis.jpg|thumb|right|150px|Uncircumcised penis, flaccid (left) and erect (right)]]
 
[[Image:Circumsised penis - Flacid and Erect - High Res.jpg|thumb|right|150px|Circumcised penis, flaccid (left) and erect (right)]]
 
Circumcision removes the [[foreskin]] from the [[penis]]. For infant circumcision, clamps, such as the [[Gomco clamp]], [[Plastibell]], and Mogen are often used. Clamps are designed to cut the blood supply to the foreskin, stop any [[hemostasis|bleeding]] and protect the glans. Before using a clamp, the foreskin and the glans are separated with a blunt probe and/or curved hemostat.
 
 
 
* With the Plastibell, the foreskin and the clamp come away in three to seven days.
 
 
 
* With a Gomco clamp, a section of skin is first crushed with a [[hemostat]] then slit with scissors. The foreskin is drawn over the bell shaped portion of the clamp and inserted through a hole in the base of the clamp and the clamp is tightened, "crushing the foreskin between the bell and the base plate."  The crushing limits bleeding (provides hemostasis). While the flared bottom of the bell fits tightly against the hole of the base plate, the foreskin is then cut away with a scalpel from above the base plate. The bell prevents the glans being reached by the scalpel.
 
 
* With a Mogen clamp, the foreskin is grabbed dorsally with a straight hemostat, and lifted up. The Mogen clamp is then slid between the glans and hemostat, following the angle of the corona to avoid removing excess skin ventrally and to obtain a superior cosmetic result, than with Gomco or Plastibell circumcisions. The clamp is locked shut, and a scalpel is used to cut the foreskin from the flat (upper) side of the clamp. The frenulum is cut if frenular chordee is evident.
 
  
 
==Cultures and religions==
 
==Cultures and religions==
Some cultures may circumcise their males either shortly after birth, during childhood or around puberty as part of a rite of passage. Circumcision is most prevalent in Muslim countries, Israel, the United States, the Philippines, and South Korea and is most prevalent in the [[Jew]]ish and [[Muslim]] faiths. It is less common in Europe, Latin America, China. and India. Hodges argues that in Ancient Greece the foreskin was valued and that Greek and Roman attempts to abolish ritual circumcision were prompted by humanitarian concerns.<ref>{{cite journal
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The time of circumcision differs from culture to culture: either shortly after birth, during childhood or around puberty as part of a rite of passage. In terms of religion, it is most prevalent in the [[Jew]]ish and [[Muslim]] faiths. It is less common in Europe, Latin America, China, and India.  
| last = Hodges
 
| first = Frederick, M.
 
| year = 2001 Religious circumcision: a Jewish view
 
| journal = The Bulletin of the History of Medicine
 
| volume = 75
 
| issue = Fall 2001
 
| pages = 375–405
 
| url = http://www.cirp.org/library/history/hodges2/
 
| format = PDF
 
| accessdate = 2007-07-24
 
}}
 
</ref>
 
  
 
===Judaism===
 
===Judaism===
Circumcision is a fundamental rite of [[Judaism]]. It is a positive [[613 mitzvot|commandment]] obligatory under [[halakha|Jewish law]] for Jewish males, and is only postponed or abrogated in the case of threat to the life or health of the child. It is usually performed in a ceremony called a ''[[Brit milah]]'' (or ''Bris milah'', colloquially simply ''bris'') ([[Hebrew language|Hebrew]] for "Covenant of circumcision"). A ''[[mohel]]'' performs the ceremony on the eighth day after birth unless health reasons force a delay. According to the [[Torah]] ([[Genesis]], chapter 17 verses 9-14), [[God]] commanded [[Abraham]] to circumcise himself, his offspring and his slaves as a sign of an everlasting covenant.
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[[Image:Isaac-with-Abraham.jpg|thumb|Abraham and Isaac. The covenant of circumcision was initiated through Abraham and carried on through his descendants, centering on Isaac.]]
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Circumcision is a fundamental rite of [[Judaism]], initiated as a sign of God's covenant with Abraham and his descendants. It is a positive [[613 mitzvot|commandment]] obligatory under [[halakha|Jewish law]] for Jewish males, and is only postponed or abrogated in the case of threat to the life or health of the child. It is usually performed in a ceremony called a ''[[Brit milah]]'' (or ''Bris milah,'' colloquially simply ''bris'') ([[Hebrew language|Hebrew]] for "Covenant of circumcision"). A ''[[mohel]]'' performs the ceremony on the eighth day after birth unless health reasons force a delay. According to the [[Torah]] ([[Genesis]], chapter 17 verses 9-14), [[God]] commanded [[Abraham]] to circumcise himself, his offspring, and his slaves as a sign of an everlasting covenant:
  
According to Jewish law, failure to follow the commandment carries the penalty of ''karet'', or being cut off from the community by God. ''Brit milah'' is considered to be so important that should the eighth day fall on [[Shabbat|the Sabbath]], actions that would normally be forbidden because of the sanctity of the day are permitted in order to fulfill the requirement to circumcise. The expressly ritual element of circumcision in Judaism, as distinguished from its non-ritual requirement in Islam, is shown by the requirement that a child who either is born [[Aposthia|aposthetic]] (without a foreskin) or who has been circumcised without the ritual must nevertheless undergo a ''Brit milah'' in which a drop of blood (''hatafat-dam'', הטפת דם) is drawn from the penis at the point where the foreskin would have been or was attached.
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<blockquote>God also said to Abraham: “On your part, you and your descendants after you must keep my covenant throughout the ages. This is my covenant with you and your descendants after you that you must keep: every male among you shall be circumcised. Circumcise the flesh of your foreskin, and that shall be the mark of the covenant between you and me."</blockquote>
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According to Jewish law, failure to follow the commandment carries the penalty of ''karet'', or being cut off from the community by God. ''Brit milah'' is considered to be so important that should the eighth day fall on [[Shabbat|the Sabbath]], actions that would normally be forbidden because of the sanctity of the day are permitted in order to fulfill the requirement to circumcise. The expressly ritual element of circumcision in Judaism, as distinguished from its non-ritual requirement in [[Islam]], is shown by the requirement in Orthodox tradition that a child who either is born [[Aposthia|aposthetic]] (without a foreskin) or who has been circumcised without the ritual must nevertheless undergo a ''Brit milah'' in which a drop of blood (''hatafat-dam'', הטפת דם) is drawn from the penis at the point where the foreskin would have been or was attached.
  
 
===Christianity===
 
===Christianity===
[[Christianity]] does not call for [[Circumcision in the Bible|circumcision]]. The [[Council of Jerusalem|first Church Council in Jerusalem]] declared that circumcision was not necessary. [[Paul of Tarsus|St. Paul]] had Timothy circumcised, but in his letters he warned gentile Christians against adopting the practice. While in most countries, Christians do not circumcise.
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According to the Gospel of Luke, [[Jesus]] himself was circumcised on the eighth day. However, [[Christianity]] does not call for circumcision, especially as it pertains to Gentile Christians. [[Saint Paul]] was particularly adamant in his opinion against the circumcision of Gentile believers.
  
But (European) Christendom, as in other things, is curiously contradictory: for instance, it still keeps a "Feast of the Circumcision," and practically holds circumcision in horror. Eastern Christians, however, have not wholly abolished it, and the Abyssinians, who find it a useful hygenic precaution, still practise it. For ulcers, syphilis and other venereals which are readily cured in Egypt become dangerous in the highlands of Ethiopia. It is customary among the [[Coptic Christian|Coptic]], [[Ethiopian Orthodox|Ethiopian]], and [[Eritrean Orthodox]] Churches, and also some other African churches.
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<blockquote>Was anyone called while circumcised? Let him not become uncircumcised. Was anyone called while uncircumcised? Let him not be circumcised. Circumcision is nothing and uncircumcision is nothing, but keeping the commandments of God is what matters (I Corinthians 7:18-19).</blockquote>
  
Some Christian churches in South Africa oppose circumcision, viewing it as a pagan ritual, while others, including the men and women in Nyanza province Kenya, find male circumcision  acceptable. AIDS care requires circumcision for membership. Some participants in focus group discussions in Zambia and Malawi said that Christians should practice circumcision because Jesus was circumcised and the Bible teaches the practice.
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The original apostles and Christian believers were Jews, who practiced the commandment to circumcise their sons. However, a question arose as to whether or not Gentiles who accepted Jesus as the [[Messiah]] needed to be circumcised. The meeting between Paul and the senior apostles known as the [[Council of Jerusalem]] declared that circumcision was not necessary for Gentile believers. However, the council did not directly deal with the question of Jewish Christians circumcising their sons. [[Paul of Tarsus|St. Paul]] had his disciple [[Timothy]] circumcised (Acts 16:3). In Acts 21, Paul made a public act of purification in the [[Temple of Jerusalem]] to demonstrate that the charges against him—of teaching that Jewish Christians should not circumcise their sons—were untrue. Acts records the following instruction to Paul from James the Just, head of Jerusalem church and identified as "the Lord's brother:"
  
The Greek Orthodox Church celebrates the [[Circumcision of Christ]] on January 1, while Orthodox churches following the [[Julian calendar]] celebrate it on January 14. The Russian Orthodox Church considers it a "Great Feast". In the [[Solemnity of Mary, Mother of God|Catholic]], Anglican and Lutheran churches it has been replaced by other commemorations. At the [[Council of Florence|Council of Basel-Florence]] in 1442, the [[Catholic Church]] condemned circumcision among the Copts and ordered against its practice.
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<blockquote>We ([[Jewish Christians]] in Jerusalem) have been informed that you teach all the Jews who live among the Gentiles to turn away from Moses, telling them not to circumcise their children… There are four men with us who have made a vow. Take these men, join in their purification rites and pay their expenses… Then everybody will know there is no truth in these reports about you (Acts 21: 20-24).</blockquote>
  
===Islam===
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However, in his letters, Paul strictly warned Gentile Christians against adopting the practice of circumcision and downplayed its significance for Jews. Despite his statement in [[First Corinthians]] about the importance of keeping the commandments, in another of his letters Paul argued that keeping faith in [[Christ]] alone—not keeping the Jewish ceremonial laws—brought salvation.
The origin of circumcision in [[Islam]] is a matter of religious and scholarly debate. It is mentioned in some ''[[hadith]]'', but not in the [[Qur'an]]. Some [[Fiqh]] scholars state that circumcision is ''recommended'' ([[Sunnah]]); others that it is ''obligatory''.<ref>{{cite web
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| url = http://www.islam-qa.com/index.php?ln=eng&ds=qa&lv=browse&QR=9412&dgn=4
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After the destruction of the Temple in 70 C.E., Christianity took on a less Jewish character, and was soon to become an essentially Gentile religion, in which Paul's teachings against circumcision were the norm. Although some Christians still practiced it, at the [[Council of Florence|Council of Basel-Florence]] in 1442, the [[Catholic Church]] condemned circumcision among the Copts and ordered against its practice. During the [[Spanish Inquisition]], inspectors considered the circumcision of the sons of [[conversos|Jewish converts to Christianity]] to be evidence that the convert was insincere in his conversion, which was a capital crime.<ref>CD Library, [http://content.cdlib.org/xtf/view?docId=ft396nb1w0&doc.view=content&chunk.id=d0e8383&toc.depth=1&anchor.id=0&brand=eschol Inquisition and the Crypto-Jewish Community.] Retrieved October 9, 2007.</ref>
| title = Question #9412: Circumcision: how it is done and the rulings on it
 
| accessdate = 2006-07-01
 
| last = Al-Munajjid
 
| first = Muhammed Salih
 
| publisher = Islam Q&A
 
}}
 
</ref> Some have quoted the ''hadith'' to argue that the requirement of circumcision is based on the covenant with [[Abraham]].<ref>{{cite web
 
| url = http://www.islam-qa.com/index.php?ln=eng&ds=qa&lv=browse&QR=7073&dgn=3
 
| title = Question #7073: The health and religious benefits of circumcision
 
| accessdate = 2006-07-01
 
| last = Al-Munajjid
 
| first = Muhammed Salih
 
| publisher = Islam Q&A
 
}}
 
</ref>
 
  
The timing of Muslim circumcision varies. Turkish, [[Balkan]], rural Egyptians and Central and South Asian Muslims typically circumcise boys between the ages of six and 11. Traditionally, Turkish circumcisions are celebrated with sweets and the "Sünnet Düğünü," or "Circumcision Feast/Celebration." It is considered a very important celebration in man's life as a passage to a manhood. However, in the middle-class circumcision is more usually done in infancy.
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Nevertheless, some mainstream Christian traditions still keep a "Feast of the Circumcision," commemorating Jesus' own circumcision on the eight day after his birth. The [[Greek Orthodox Church]] celebrates the [[Circumcision of Christ]] on January 1, while those Orthodox churches following the [[Julian calendar]] celebrate it on January 14. The [[Russian Orthodox Church]] considers it a "Great Feast." In the Catholic, Anglican and Lutheran churches it has been replaced by other commemorations. Roman Catholics celebrate January 1 as the Solemnity of [[Mary]], the [[Mother of God]], and it remains a holy day of obligation.
  
In [[Pakistan]], Muslims may be circumcised at all ages from the newborn period to adulthood, though the medical profession has encouraged medical circumcisions in the first week after birth to reduce complications: "Circumcision is performed by barbers, medical technicians, quacks and doctors including paediatric surgeon[s] [and as] yet there is no consensus for the best age and method."<ref>Iftikhar Ahmad Jan, "Circumcision in babies and children with Plastibell technique: An easy procedure with minimal complications - Experience of 316 cases," Pak J Med Sci 2004, 20(3) 175-180.</ref> 
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Eastern Christians never wholly abolished the practice of circumcision, and the [[Abyssinians]], living among largely Muslim populations, find it a useful hygienic precaution. It is also customary among the [[Coptic Christian|Coptic]], [[Ethiopian Orthodox|Ethiopian]], and [[Eritrean Orthodox]] Churches, and also some other African churches. In the U.S., most Protestants and many Catholics have their sons circumcised for hygienic reasons, and the practice has become increasingly common in Europe as well.
  
In Iran, Dr. Paula Drew states that “circumcision, which formerly celebrated the onset of manhood, has for many years now been more customarily performed at the age of five or six for children born at home, and at two days old for those born in a medical setting.…By puberty, all Muslim Iranian boys must be circumcised if they are to participate fully in religious activities.”<ref>{{cite encyclopedia
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===Islam===
| last = Drew
+
[[Image:Koceks - Surname-i Vehbi.jpg|thumb|right|270px|A troupe dancing at Sultan [[Ahmed III]]'s 14-day celebration of his sons' circumcision in 1720. Miniature from the ''Surname-i Vehbi'', [[Topkapı Palace]], [[Istanbul]].]]
| first = Paula E.
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The origin of circumcision in [[Islam]] is a matter of religious and scholarly debate. It is mentioned in some ''[[hadith]],'' but not in the [[Qur'an]] itself. Some Islamic scholars hold that circumcision is ''recommended,'' others that it is ''obligatory''.<ref>Al-Munajjid, Muhammed Salih, [http://www.islam-qa.com/index.php?ln=eng&ds=qa&lv=browse&QR=9412&dgn=4 ''Question #9412: Circumcision: how it is done and the rulings on it,''] ''www.islam-qa.com''. Retrieved October 20, 2007.</ref> However, no uncircumcised male may lawfully make the pilgrimage to Mecca, which is a required act of all Muslims capable of making the journey. <ref>www.circlist.com, [http://www.circlist.com/rites/moslem.html Traditional Muslim Male Circumcision.] Retrieved October 9, 2007.</ref>
| coauthors = F. A. Sadeghpour and anonymous
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The timing of Muslim circumcision varies. Arabs traditionally performed the operation at the onset of puberty, and it is thought the Prophet himself was circumcised in this way. Turkish, [[Balkan]], rural Egyptians, and Central and South Asian Muslims typically circumcise boys between the ages of six and 11. Traditionally, Turkish circumcisions are celebrated with sweets and the "Sünnet Düğünü," or "Circumcision Feast/Celebration." It is considered a very important celebration in man's life as a passage to manhood. However, in the middle-class, circumcision is more usually done in infancy.
| editor = [[Robert T. Francoeur]]
 
| encyclopedia = The International Encyclopedia of Sexuality
 
| title = Iran
 
| url = http://www2.hu-berlin.de/sexology/IES/iran.html
 
| accessdate = 2006-10-18
 
| publisher = Continuum Publishing Company
 
| location = [[New York, NY]]
 
}}
 
</ref> Kamyar ''et al'' describe circumcision as an "obligatory custom" and note that it is not necessary for the circumciser to be a Muslim.<ref>Kamyar M. Hedayat, MD and Roya Pirzadeh, MD, "Issues in Islamic Biomedical Ethics: A Primer for the Pediatrician," ''Pediatrics'' Vol. 108 No. 4 October 2001, pp. 965-971, http://imamreza.net/eng/imamreza.php?print=3107 retrieved October 11, 2006.</ref>
 
  
===Other faiths and traditions===
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In [[Pakistan]], Muslims may be circumcised at all ages from the newborn period to adulthood, though the medical profession has encouraged circumcisions in the first week after birth to reduce complications.  
[[Bahai Faith|Bahá'ís]] do not have any particular tradition or rituals regarding male circumcision, but view female circumcision as mutilation. The [[Druze]] have no male circumcision in their religion, although, according to one source, it is practiced among those living in urban areas or outside the Middle East, mainly for hygienic reasons.
 
  
There is no specific reference to male circumcision in the Hindu holy books, and Hindus in India generally do not practice circumcision.
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In Iran, circumcision was traditionally practiced at the onset of puberty, but is now usually performed at the age of five or six for children born at home, or at two days old for those born in hospitals.<ref>Paula E. Drew and F. A. Sadeghpour (eds.), ''The International Encyclopedia of Sexuality'' (Iran), Continuum Publishing Company.</ref> A Muslim Iranian boy must be circumcised by puberty if he is to participate normally in religious activities.
  
[[Sikh]] male infants are not circumcised.  
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===Other traditions===
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Circumcision is part of the [[initiation rite]]s in some African, Pacific Islander, and Australian aboriginal [[traditions]] in areas such as Arnhem Land, where the practice was introduced by Makassan traders from Sulawesi in the Indonesian Archipelago.
  
Circumcision in South Korea is largely the result of American cultural and military influence following the [[Korean War]]. The origin of circumcision in the Philippines is uncertain. One newspaper article speculates that it is due to the influence of western colonizers.<ref>{{cite news
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[[Image:Dogon Circumsion Cave Painting.jpg|thumb|250px|A Dogon painting in a "circumcision cave."]]
|first = Rommel G.
 
|last = Rebollido
 
|url = http://www.sunstar.com.ph/static/gen/2005/03/21/feat/passage.to.manhood.html
 
|title = Passage to manhood
 
|work = General Santos
 
|publisher = Sun Star Publishing, Inc.
 
|date = March 21, 2005
 
|accessdate = 2006-07-01
 
|language =
 
}}
 
</ref> However, [[Antonio de Morga]]'s [[17th century|seventeenth century]] ''History of the Philippine Islands'', speculates that it is due to Islamic influence.<ref>{{cite book
 
| last = de Morga
 
| first = Antonio
 
| others = Translated by Alfonso de Salvio, Norman F. Hall, and James Alexander Robertson
 
| title = History of the Philippine Islands
 
| origyear = 1609
 
| url = http://www.nalanda.nitc.ac.in/resources/english/etext-project/history/philippine/index.htm
 
| accessdate = 2006-07-01
 
| date = 1907
 
| id = {{LCCN|unk82|0|42869}}
 
| chapter = 11
 
| chapterurl =  http://www.nalanda.nitc.ac.in/resources/english/etext-project/history/philippine/chapter11.html
 
| quote = <small>These Borneans are Mahometans, and were already introducing their religion among the natives of Luzon, and were giving them instructions, ceremonies, and the form of observing their religion.…and those the chiefest men, were commencing, although by piecemeal, to become Moros, and were being circumcised and taking the names of Moros.</small>}}</ref> In West Africa infant circumcision may have had tribal significance as a rite of passage or otherwise in the past; today in some non-Muslim Nigerian societies it is medicalised and is simply a cultural norm.<ref>Ajuwon et al., "Indigenous surgical practices in rural southwestern Nigeria: Implications for disease," Health Educ. Res..1995; 10: 379-384 Health Educ. Res..1995; 10: 379-384 Retrieved 3 October 2006</ref> In early 2007 it was announced that rural aidpost orderlies in the East Sepik Province of Papua New Guinea are to undergo training in the circumcision of men and boys of all ages with a view to introducing the procedure as a means of prophylaxis against HIV/AIDS, which is becoming a significant problem in the country.<ref>{{cite web
 
| title = "PNG circumcision campaign hopes to halt HIV,"
 
| publisher = ABC Radio Australia citing the ''Papua New Guinea Post-Courier''
 
| url = http://www.radioaustralia.net.au/news/stories/s1842948.htm
 
| format = htm
 
| date = 2007-02-08, 14:21:13,
 
}}</ref>
 
  
Circumcision is part of [[initiation rite]]s in some African, Pacific Islander, and Australian aboriginal [[traditions]] in areas such as Arnhem Land, where the practice was introduced by Makassan traders from Sulawesi in the Indonesian Archipelago.
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In West Africa infant circumcision may have had tribal significance as a rite of passage. Today in some non-Muslim Nigerian societies it is medicalized and is simply a cultural norm. Among some West African animist groups, such as the [[Dogon]] and [[Dowayo]], it is taken to represent a removal of "feminine" aspects of the male, turning boys into fully masculine males. In additional African societies, circumcision has become medicalized and is simply performed in infancy without any particular conscious cultural significance. Among the Urhobo of southern Nigeria it is symbolic of a boy entering into manhood. The ritual expression, ''Omo te Oshare'' ("the boy is now man"), constitutes a rite of passage from one age set to another.
  
Circumcision ceremonies among certain Australian aboriginal societies are noted for their painful nature, including [[subincision]] for some aboriginal peoples in the Western Desert.
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For [[Nilotic]] peoples, such as the [[Kalenjin]] and [[Maasai]], circumcision is a rite of passage observed collectively by a number of boys every few years, and boys circumcised at the same time are taken to be members of a single [[age set]]. Authority derives from the age-group and the age-set. Prior to circumcision a natural leader, or ''olaiguenani,'' is selected; he leads his age-group through a series of rituals until old age, sharing responsibility with a select few, of whom the ritual expert (oloiboni) is the ultimate authority. Masai youths are not circumcised until they are mature, and a new age-set is initiated together at regular intervals of 12 to 15 years. The young warriors (ilmurran) remain initiates for some time, using blunt arrows to hunt small birds which are stuffed and tied to a frame to form a head-dress.
  
In the Pacific, ritual circumcision is nearly universal in the Melanesian islands of [[Fiji]] and [[Vanuatu]]; participation in the traditional land diving on [[Pentecost Island]] is reserved for those who have been circumcised. Circumcision is also commonly practised in the Polynesian islands of [[Samoa]], [[Tonga]], [[Niue]], and [[Tikopia]]. In Samoa, it is accompanied by a celebration.
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Circumcision ceremonies among certain Australian aboriginal societies are noted for their painful nature, including [[subincision]] for some aboriginal peoples in the Western Desert.  
  
Among some West African animist groups, such as the [[Dogon]] and [[Dowayo]], it is taken to represent a removal of "feminine" aspects of the male, turning boys into fully masculine males. In additional African societies, circumcision has become medicalized and is simply performed in infancy without ado or any particular conscious cultural significance. Among the Urhobo of southern Nigeria it is symbolic of a boy entering into manhood. The ritual expression, ''Omo te Oshare'' ("the boy is now man"), constitutes a rite of passage from one age set to another.
+
In the Pacific, ritual circumcision is nearly universal in the Melanesian islands of [[Fiji]] and [[Vanuatu]]; participation in the traditional land diving on [[Pentecost Island]] is reserved for those who have been circumcised. Circumcision is also commonly practiced in the Polynesian islands of [[Samoa]], [[Tonga]], [[Niue]], and [[Tikopia]]. In Samoa, it is accompanied by a celebration.
  
For [[Nilotic]] peoples, such as the [[Kalenjin]] and [[Maasai]], circumcision is a rite of passage observed collectively by a number of boys every few years, and boys circumcised at the same time are taken to be members of a single [[age set]]. Authority derives from the age-group and the age-set. Prior to circumcision a natural leader, or ''olaiguenani'', is selected; he leads his age-group through a series of rituals until old age, sharing responsibility with a select few, of whom the ritual expert (oloiboni) is the ultimate authority. Masai youths are not circumcised until they are mature, and a new age-set is initiated together at regular intervals of 12 to 15 years. The young warriors (ilmurran) remain initiates for some time, using blunt arrows to hunt small birds  which are stuffed and tied to a frame to form a head-dress.
+
Circumcision in South Korea is largely the result of American cultural and military influence following the [[Korean War]]. The origin of circumcision in the Philippines is uncertain, with both western and Muslim influence being probable factors.
  
 
==Ethical issues==
 
==Ethical issues==
The [[American Medical Association]] defines “non-therapeutic” circumcision as the non-religious, non-ritualistic, not medically necessary, elective circumcision of male newborns. It states that medical associations in the United States, Australia, and Canada do not recommend the routine non-therapeutic circumcision of newborns. Therefore, circumcising infants is controversial. [[Circumcision advocacy|Those advocating circumcision]] assert that circumcision is a significant public health measure, preventing infections, and slowing down the spread of [[AIDS]].
+
Circumcising infants is controversial. Those advocating circumcision assert that circumcision is a significant public health measure, preventing infections, and slowing down the spread of [[AIDS]]. However some medical associations in the United States, Australia, and Canada do not recommend the routine, non-therapeutic circumcision of newborns.
  
[[genital integrity|Those opposing circumcision]], however, question the legality of infant circumcision by asserting that infant circumcision is a [[human rights violation]] or a [[sexual assault]].
+
Views differ on whether limits should be placed on caregivers having a child circumcised. Opponents argue that the medical benefits of circumcision are uncertain, and that removal of healthy genital tissue from a minor should therefore not be subject to parental discretion. Some also suggest that physicians who perform the procedure are not acting in accordance with their ethical duties to the patient, regardless of parental consent. Others argue that there is no convincing evidence of sexual or emotional harm in male circumcision, and that there are much greater monetary and psychological costs in circumcising later rather than in infancy.  
  
===Consent===
+
Traditionally, circumcision has been presumed to be legal when performed by a trained operator. In 2001, [[Sweden]] allowed only persons certified by the National Board of Health to circumcise infants, requiring a medical doctor or an anesthesia nurse to accompany the circumciser and for anesthetic to be applied beforehand. Jews and Muslims in Sweden objected to the new law, saying it violates their religious rights. In 2001, the [[World Jewish Congress]] stated that it was “the first legal restriction on Jewish religious practice in Europe since the Nazi era.”<ref>Canadian Children's Rights Council, [http://www.canadiancrc.com/articles/Jews_Protest_Swedish_Circumcision_Restriction_07JUN01.htm Jews protest Swedish circumcision restriction.] Retrieved October 20, 2007.</ref> However, in 2006, the United States State Department reported that  most Jewish [[mohel]]s had been certified under the law and 3000 Muslim and 40 to 50 Jewish boys were circumcised each year.
Views differ on whether limits should be placed on caregivers having a child circumcised.
 
  
Somerville argues that the nature of the medical benefits cited as a justification for infant circumcision are such that the potential medical problems can be avoided or, if they occur, treated in far less invasive ways than circumcision. She states that the removal of healthy genital tissue from a minor should not be subject to parental discretion, or that physicians who perform the procedure are not acting in accordance with their ethical duties to the patient, regardless of parental consent.<ref name = "Sommerville" /> Another argument questions why the genital cutting of males is allowed while the [[female genital cutting|genital cutting of females]] is prohibited.<ref>{{cite web
+
The American Academy of Pediatrics (1999) stated "a survey of adult males using self-report suggests more varied sexual practice and less sexual dysfunction in circumcised adult men." In January 2007, The American Academy of Family Physicians (AAFP) stated: "No valid evidence to date, however, supports the notion that being circumcised affects sexual sensation or satisfaction." However, Boyle ''et al.'' (2002) argued that circumcision removes tissues with "heightened erogenous sensitivity."<ref>Gregory J. Boyle, J. Steven Svoboda, Ronald Goldman, and Ephrem Fernandez, [http://epublications.bond.edu.au/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1036&context=hss_pubs ''Male circumcision: Pain, trauma, and psychosexual sequelae,'']  Bond University Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, 2002. ''epublications.bond.edu.au''. Retrieved October 20, 2007.</ref> They concluded that, "Evidence has also started to accumulate that male circumcision may result in lifelong physical, sexual, and sometimes psychological harm as well."
| url = http://www.fgmnetwork.org/intro/mgmfgm.html
 
| title = Similarities in Attitudes and Misconceptions toward Infant Male Circumcision in North America and Ritual Female Genital Mutilation in Africa.
 
 
 
 
 
| accessdate = 2006-07-01
 
| last = Lightfoot-Klein
 
| first = Hanny
 
| year = 2003
 
| publisher = The FGC Education and Networking Project
 
}}
 
</ref>
 
 
 
Others argue that there is no convincing evidence of sexual or emotional harm, and that there are greater monetary and psychological costs in circumcising later rather than in infancy. The BMA insists that a circumcision must not go ahead without the consent of both parents and the competent child.<ref name = "BMAGuide" />
 
 
 
===Emotional consequences===
 
Goldman discussed the extent to which circumcision may cause emotional harm to males.<ref>{{cite journal
 
| last = Goldman
 
| first = R.
 
| year = 1999
 
| month = January
 
| title = The psychological impact of circumcision
 
| journal = BJU International
 
| volume = 83
 
| issue = S1
 
| pages = 93&ndash;102
 
| doi = 10.1046/j.1464-410x.1999.0830s1093.x
 
| id =
 
| url = http://www.blackwell-synergy.com/doi/pdf/10.1046/j.1464-410x.1999.0830s1093.x
 
| format = PDF
 
| accessdate = 2006-07-02
 
}}
 
</ref> Some organizations have been formed as support groups for men who are resentful about being circumcised.<ref>{{cite web
 
| url = http://www.norm.org/
 
| title = National Organization of Restoring Men
 
| accessdate = 2006-07-01
 
| year = 2006
 
}}
 
</ref>
 
 
 
===Legality===
 
Traditionally, circumcision has been presumed to be legal when performed by a trained operator.
 
 
 
In 2001, [[Sweden]] allowed only persons certified by the National Board of Health to circumcise infants, requiring a medical doctor or an anesthesia nurse to accompany the circumciser and for anaesthetic to be applied beforehand. Jews and Muslims in Sweden objected to the new law, saying it violates their religious rights. In 2001, the [[World Jewish Congress]] stated that it was “the first legal restriction on Jewish religious practice in Europe since the Nazi era.”<ref>{{cite web
 
| url = http://www.canadiancrc.com/articles/Jews_Protest_Swedish_Circumcision_Restriction_07JUN01.htm
 
| title = Jews protest Swedish circumcision restriction
 
| accessdate = 2006-10-18
 
| author = [[Reuters]]
 
| date = June 7, 2001
 
| publisher = Canadian Children's Rights Council
 
| quote = A WJC spokesman said, ‘This is the first legal restriction placed on a Jewish rite in Europe since the Nazi era. This new legislation is totally unacceptable to the Swedish Jewish community.’
 
}}
 
</ref> However, in 2006, the United States State Department reported that  most Jewish [[mohel]]s had been certified under the law and 3000 Muslim and 40 to 50 Jewish boys were circumcised each year. The National Board of Health and Welfare reviewed the law in 2005 and recommended that it be maintained.
 
 
 
==Sexual effects==
 
The American Academy of Pediatrics (1999) stated "a survey of adult males using self-report suggests more varied sexual practice and less sexual dysfunction in circumcised adult men. There are anecdotal reports that penile sensation and sexual satisfaction are decreased for circumcised males. [[Masters and Johnson]] noted no difference in exteroceptive and light tactile discrimination on the ventral or dorsal surfaces of the glans penis between circumcised and uncircumcised men."<ref name = "AAP1999" />
 
 
 
In January 2007, The American Academy of Family Physicians (AAFP) stated "The effect of circumcision on penile sensation or sexual satisfaction is unknown. Because the epithelium of a circumcised glans becomes cornified, and because some feel nerve over-stimulation leads to desensitization, many believe that the glans of a circumcised penis is less sensitive. Opinions differ about how this decreased sensitivity, which may result in prolonged time to orgasm, affects sexual satisfaction. An investigation of the exteroceptive and light tactile discrimination of the glans of circumcised and uncircumcised men found no difference on comparison. No valid evidence to date, however, supports the notion that being circumcised affects sexual sensation or satisfaction."<ref name = "AAFP" />
 
 
 
Boyle ''et al.'' (2002) argued that circumcision and frenectomy remove tissues with "heightened erogenous sensitivity," stating "the genitally intact male has thousands of fine touch receptors and other highly erogenous nerve endings&mdash;many of which are lost to circumcision."<ref>{{cite web |url=http://epublications.bond.edu.au/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1036&context=hss_pubs |title=Male circumcision: pain, trauma, and psychosexual sequelae |first=Gregory J |last=Boyle |coauthors=Svoboda, J Steven; Goldman, Ronald; Fernandez, Ephrem |publisher=Bond University Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences |year=2002}}</ref> They concluded, "Evidence has also started to accumulate that male circumcision may result in lifelong physical, sexual, and sometimes psychological harm as well."
 
  
 
==Medical aspects==
 
==Medical aspects==
The [[British Medical Association]], states “there is significant disagreement about whether circumcision is overall a beneficial, neutral or harmful procedure. At present, the medical literature on the health, including sexual health, implications of circumcision is contradictory, and often subject to claims of bias in research.”<ref name = "BMAGuide" />  [[Medical analysis of circumcision#Costs and Benefits|Cost-benefit analyses]] have varied. Some found a small net benefit of circumcision,<ref>{{cite journal
+
The [[British Medical Association]], states “there is significant disagreement about whether circumcision is overall a beneficial, neutral or harmful procedure. At present, the medical literature on the health, including sexual health, implications of circumcision is contradictory, and often subject to claims of bias in research.” [[Medical analysis of circumcision#Costs and Benefits|Cost-benefit analyses]] have varied.  
| last = Schoen
 
| first = Edgar J.
 
| coauthors = Christopher J. Colby, Trinh T. To
 
| year = 2006
 
| month = March
 
| title = Cost Analysis of Neonatal Circumcision in a Large Health Maintenance Organization
 
| journal = The Journal of Urology
 
| volume = 175
 
| issue = 3
 
| pages = 1111&ndash;1115
 
| doi = 10.1016/S0022-5347(05)00399-X
 
| id = PMID 16469634
 
| url = http://www.jurology.com/article/PIIS002253470500399X/abstract
 
| format = Abstract
 
| accessdate = 2006-07-01
 
}}
 
</ref><ref>{{cite journal
 
| last = Alanis
 
| first = Mark C.
 
| coauthors = Richard S. Lucidi
 
| year = 2004
 
| month = May
 
| title = Neonatal Circumcision: A Review of the World’s Oldest and Most Controversial Operation
 
| journal = Obstetrical & Gynecological Survey
 
| volume = 59
 
| issue = 5
 
| pages = 379-395
 
| doi =
 
| id = PMID 15097799
 
| url = http://www.obgynsurvey.com/pt/re/obgynsurv/abstract.00006254-200405000-00026.htm;jsessionid=FbJT6LYnQxr66KhvWNsBW0msy7SHpJgL39wbFTGLnQpzJ82BGLVQ!1096339265!-949856144!8091!-1
 
| format = Abstract
 
| accessdate = 2006-09-27
 
}}
 
</ref> some found a small net decrement,<ref>{{cite journal
 
| last = Van Howe
 
| first = Robert S.
 
| year = 2004
 
| month = November
 
| title = A Cost-Utility Analysis of Neonatal Circumcision
 
| journal = Medical Decision Making
 
| volume = 24
 
| issue = 6
 
| pages = 584&ndash;601
 
| doi = 10.1177/0272989X04271039
 
| id = PMID 15534340
 
| url = http://mdm.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/24/6/584
 
| format = Abstract
 
| accessdate = 2006-07-01
 
}}
 
</ref><ref>{{cite journal
 
| last = Ganiats
 
| first = TG
 
| coauthors = Humphrey JB, Taras HL, Kaplan RM.
 
| year = 1991
 
| month = Oct&ndash;Dec
 
| title = Routine neonatal circumcision: a cost-utility analysis
 
| journal = Medical Decision Making
 
| volume = 11
 
| issue = 4
 
| pages = 282&ndash;293
 
| doi =
 
| id = PMID 1766331
 
| url =
 
| format =
 
| accessdate = 2006-07-01
 
}}
 
</ref> and one found that the benefits and risks balanced each other out and suggested that the decision could "most reasonably be made on nonmedical factors."<ref>{{cite journal
 
| last = Lawler
 
| first = FH
 
| coauthors = Bisonni RS, Holtgrave DR.
 
| year = 1991
 
| month = Nov&ndash;Dec
 
| title = Circumcision: a decision analysis of its medical value.
 
| journal = Family Medicine
 
| volume = 23
 
| issue = 8
 
| pages = 587&ndash;593
 
| doi =
 
| id = PMID 1794670
 
| url =
 
| format =
 
| accessdate = 2006-07-01
 
}}
 
</ref>
 
  
===Risks of circumcision===
+
The risk in a competently performed medical circumcision is very low. According to the American Medical Association AMA, [[Bleeding|blood loss]] and [[infection]] are the most common complications. Bleeding is mostly minor; applying pressure will stop it. However, in poorly carried out circumcisions, complications from bleeding and infection can be catastrophic.  
While the risk in a competently performed medical circumcision is very low, complications from bleeding, infection and poorly carried out circumcisions can be catastrophic.<ref>{{cite journal
 
| last = Ahmed A,
 
| first = A
 
| coauthors = Mbibi NH, Dawam D, Kalayi GD
 
| year = 1999
 
| month = March
 
| title = Complications of traditional male circumcision
 
| journal = Annals of Tropical Paediatrics
 
| volume = 19
 
| issue = 1
 
| pages = 113&ndash;117
 
| doi =
 
| id = PMID 10605531 {{ISSN|0272-4936}}
 
| url =
 
| format =
 
| accessdate = 2006-07-01
 
}}
 
</ref> According to the AMA, [[Bleeding|blood loss]] and [[infection]] are the most common complications. Bleeding is mostly minor; applying pressure will stop it.
 
  
===HIV===
+
Observational studies in the 1980's identified a strong association of circumcision status and a reduced risk of HIV infection, as well as of sexually transmitted genital ulcer disease, although behavioral factors may have been a part of that association. A 2007 study made by the U.S. [[National Institutes of Health]] revealed "an approximate halving of risk of HIV infection in men who were circumcised" in Kenya and Uganda. These results support the findings of a French study of South African men published in late 2005, which demonstrated "at least a 60 percent reduction in HIV infection among circumcised men."<ref>WHO, [http://www.who.int/mediacentre/news/statements/2006/s18/en/index.html Statement on Kenyan and Ugandan trial findings regarding male circumcision and HIV.] Retrieved October 9, 2007.</ref>
Observational studies in the 1980's identified a strong association of circumcision status and reduced risk of HIV infection, as well as of sexually transmitted genital ulcer disease, although behavioural factors may have been a part of that association. Population-based studies suggested that circumcision may protect against HIV, but likewise social or religious factors may have skewed results. In March 2005, the Cochrane review found the medical evidence at that point "insufficient" to consider implementing circumcision "as a public-health intervention"  but the positive results of observational studies suggested that circumcision was "worth evaluating in randomised controlled trials.<ref name="Sig">{{cite journal
 
| last = Siegfried
 
| first = N
 
| coauthors = M Muller, J Deeks, J Volmink, M Egger, N Low, S Walker, and P Williamson
 
| year = 2005
 
| month = March
 
| title = HIV and male circumcision—a systematic review with assessment of the quality of studies
 
| journal = The Lancet Infectious Diseases
 
| volume = 5
 
| issue = 3
 
| pages = 165&ndash;173
 
| doi = 10.1016/S1473-3099(05)01309-5
 
| id = PMID 15766651
 
| url = http://download.thelancet.com/pdfs/journals/1473-3099/PIIS1473309905013095.pdf
 
| format = PDF &mdash; free registration required
 
| accessdate = 2007-07-09
 
}}
 
</ref>
 
  
===Hygiene===
+
[[Smegma]]—a combination of exfoliated [[epithelial cells]], transudated skin oils, and moisture that can accumulate under the [[foreskin]] of males and within the female [[vulva]] area—is common to all [[mammals]], male and female. In some cases, accumulating smegma may help cause inflammation of the glans. It also has a strong odor. Circumcision helps control the accumulation of smegma, but proper hygiene can also do this.  
The [[American Academy of Pediatrics]] observes “Circumcision has been suggested as an effective method of maintaining penile hygiene since the time of the Egyptian dynasties, but there is little evidence to affirm the association between circumcision status and optimal penile hygiene.”<ref name="AAP1999" /><ref>Although the Academy's 1975 statement asserted that "A program of education leading to continuing good personal hygiene would offer all the advantages of circumcision without the attendant surgical risk," the 1999 statement cites a study which found that "appropriate hygiene decreased significantly the incidence of phimosis, adhesions, and inflammation, but did not eliminate all problems."</ref> It states that the "relationship among hygiene, phimosis, and penile cancer is uncertain" and further remarks that "genital hygiene needs to be emphasized as a preventive health topic throughout a patient's lifetime."
 
  
The [[Royal Australasian College of Physicians]] emphasizes that the penis of an uncircumcised infant requires no special care and should be left alone. It states that attempts to [[forcible retraction of the foreskin|forcibly retract the foreskin]], e.g. to clean it, are painful, often injure the foreskin, and can lead to scarring, infections and pathologic phimosis.
+
The [[American Academy of Pediatrics]] observes “There is little evidence to affirm the association between circumcision status and optimal penile hygiene.”<ref>Although the Academy's 1975 statement asserted that "A program of education leading to continuing good personal hygiene would offer all the advantages of circumcision without the attendant surgical risk," the 1999 statement cites a study which found that "appropriate hygiene decreased significantly the incidence of phimosis, adhesions, and inflammation, but did not eliminate all problems."</ref> However, it also states that the "relationship among hygiene, [[phimosis]] (difficulty in retracting the foreskin), and penile cancer is uncertain." The [[Royal Australasian College of Physicians]] emphasizes that the penis of an uncircumcised infant requires no special care and should be left alone.
  
[[Smegma]] is a combination of exfoliated [[epithelial cells]], transudated skin oils, and moisture that can accumulate under the [[foreskin]] of males and within the female [[vulva]] area. It is common to all [[mammals]], male and female. In rare cases, accumulating smegma may help cause [[balanitis]].
+
===Circumcision procedures===
  
==History of circumcision==
+
Circumcision removes the [[foreskin]] from the [[penis]]. For infant circumcision in modern hospital procedures, clamps, such as the [[Gomco clamp]], [[Plastibell]], and Mogen clamp are often used. Clamps are designed to cut the blood supply to the foreskin, stop any [[hemostasis|bleeding]] and protect the glans. Before using a clamp, the foreskin and the glans are separated with a blunt probe and/or curved hemostat.
It has been variously proposed that circumcision began as a religious [[sacrifice]], as a [[rite of passage]] marking a boy's entrance into adulthood, as a form of [[magical thinking|sympathetic magic]] to ensure virility, as a means of suppressing (or enhancing) sexual pleasure, as an aid to [[hygiene]] where regular [[bathing]] was impractical, as a means of marking those of lower (or higher) social status, as a means of differentiating a circumcising group from their non-circumcising neighbors, as a means of discouraging [[masturbation]] or other socially proscribed sexual behaviors, to remove "excess" pleasure, to increase a man's attractiveness to women, as a symbolic [[castration]], as a demonstration of one's ability to endure pain, or as a male counterpart to [[menstruation]] or the breaking of the [[hymen]]. It has been suggested that the custom of circumcision gave advantages to tribes that practiced it and thus led to its spread regardless of whether the people understood this.
+
 
 
+
* With a Gomco clamp, a section of skin is first crushed with a [[hemostat]] then slit with scissors. The foreskin is drawn over the bell shaped portion of the clamp and inserted through a hole in the base of the clamp and the clamp is tightened, "crushing the foreskin between the bell and the base plate." The crushing limits bleeding (provides hemostasis). While the flared bottom of the bell fits tightly against the hole of the base plate, the foreskin is then cut away with a scalpel from above the base plate. The bell prevents the glans being reached by the scalpel.
It is possible that circumcision arose independently in different cultures for different reasons.
+
 +
* With a Mogen clamp, the foreskin is grabbed dorsally with a straight hemostat, and lifted up. The Mogen clamp is then slid between the glans and hemostat, following the angle of the corona to avoid removing excess skin ventrally and to obtain a superior cosmetic result, than with Gomco or Plastibell circumcisions. The clamp is locked shut, and a scalpel is used to cut the foreskin from the flat (upper) side of the clamp. The ''frenulum'' is cut if ''frenular chordee'' is evident.
  
[[Image:Circumcision Precinct of Mut.png|thumb|right|250px|Ancient Egyptian carved scene of circumcision, from the inner northern wall of the Temple of [[Khonspekhrod]] at the [[Precinct of Mut]], [[Luxor]], Egypt. [[Eighteenth dynasty of Egypt|Eighteenth dynasty]], [[Amenhotep III]], c. 1360 B.C.E..]]
+
* With the Plastibell clamp, the foreskin and the clamp come away in three to seven days.
  
[[Image:Koceks - Surname-i Vehbi.jpg|thumb|right|250px|'''[[Kocek|Köçeks]] at a fair'''<br/>Köçek troupe dancing at Sultan [[Ahmed III]]'s 14-day celebration of his sons' circumcision in 1720. Miniature from the ''Surname-i Vehbi'', [[Topkapı Palace]], [[Istanbul]].]]
+
==Early history of circumcision==
 +
It is possible that circumcision arose independently in different cultures for different reasons. It has been variously proposed that circumcision began as a religious [[sacrifice]], as a [[rite of passage]] marking a boy's entrance into adulthood, as a form of [[magical thinking|sympathetic magic]] to ensure virility, as a means of suppressing (or enhancing) sexual pleasure, as an aid to [[hygiene]] where regular [[bathing]] was impractical, as a means of marking those of lower (or higher) social status, as a means of differentiating a circumcising group from their non-circumcising neighbors, as a means of discouraging [[masturbation]] or other socially proscribed sexual behaviors, to remove "excess" pleasure, to increase a man's attractiveness to women, as a symbolic [[castration]], as a demonstration of one's ability to endure pain, or as a male counterpart to [[menstruation]] or the breaking of the [[hymen]]. It also has been suggested that the custom of circumcision gave advantages to tribes that practiced it and thus led to its spread regardless of whether the people understood this.
  
 
===Circumcision in the ancient world===
 
===Circumcision in the ancient world===
Line 355: Line 100:
 
Circumcision was common, although not universal, among ancient [[Semitic]] peoples. The [[Book of Jeremiah]], written in the sixth century B.C.E., lists the Egyptians, Jews, [[Edomites]], [[Ammonites]], and [[Moabites]] as circumcising cultures. [[Herodotus]], writing in the fifth century B.C.E., would add the [[Colchis|Colchians]], [[Ethiopia]]ns, [[Phoenicians]], and [[Syria]]ns to that list.
 
Circumcision was common, although not universal, among ancient [[Semitic]] peoples. The [[Book of Jeremiah]], written in the sixth century B.C.E., lists the Egyptians, Jews, [[Edomites]], [[Ammonites]], and [[Moabites]] as circumcising cultures. [[Herodotus]], writing in the fifth century B.C.E., would add the [[Colchis|Colchians]], [[Ethiopia]]ns, [[Phoenicians]], and [[Syria]]ns to that list.
  
In the aftermath of the conquests of [[Alexander the Great]], Greek dislike of circumcision led to a decline in its incidence among many peoples that had previously practised it. The writer of the [[1 Maccabees]] wrote that under the [[Seleucid]]s, many Jewish men attempted to hide or reverse their circumcision so they could exercise in Greek [[Gymnasium (ancient Greece)|gymnasia]], where nudity was the norm. First Maccabees also relates that the Seleucids forbade the practice of [[brit milah]] (Jewish circumcision), and punished those who performed it&ndash;as well as the infants who underwent it&ndash;with death.
+
In the aftermath of the conquests of [[Alexander the Great]], Greek dislike of circumcision led to a decline in its incidence among many peoples that had previously practiced it. The writer of the [[1 Maccabees]] wrote that under the [[Seleucid]]s, many Jewish men attempted to hide or reverse their circumcision so they could exercise in Greek [[Gymnasium (ancient Greece)|gymnasia]], where nudity was the norm. First Maccabees also relates that the Seleucids forbade the practice of [[brit milah]] (Jewish circumcision), and punished those who performed itas well as the infants who underwent itwith death.
  
===Medical circumcision in the nineteenth century and early twentieth century===
+
===Medical circumcision modern times===
There are several hypotheses to explain why infant circumcision was accepted in the United States about the year 1900. The success of the [[germ theory of disease]] made surgery safer, and made the public deeply suspicious of dirt and bodily secretions. So [[smegma]] was viewed as unhealthy, and circumcision was seen as good penile hygiene. At that time when people regarded [[masturbation]] as both [[sin]]ful, and physically and mentally unhealthy, circumcision was promoted as a way of discouraging it. ''All About the Baby'', a popular parenting book of the 1890s, recommended infant circumcision for this purpose.  (However, a survey of 1410 men in the United States in 1992, [http://www.circs.org/library/laumann/index.html Laumann] found that circumcised men were ''more'' likely to report masturbating at least once a month.)
+
There are several hypotheses to explain why infant circumcision was accepted in the United States about the year 1900. The success of the [[germ theory of disease]] made surgery safer, and made the public deeply suspicious of dirt and bodily secretions. So [[smegma]]—which collects under the foreskin—was viewed as unhealthy, and circumcision was seen as good penile hygiene.
  
In 1855, the [[Quaker]] surgeon, Jonathan Hutchinson, observed that circumcision appeared to protect against [[syphilis]].<ref>{{cite journal | Hutchinson J | title=On the influence of circumcision in preventing syphilis | journal=Medical Times and Gazette | volume=NS Vol II | year=1855 | pages=542&ndash;3 }}</ref> Although this observation was challenged (the protection that Jews appear to have are more likely due to cultural factors, a 2006 systematic review concluded that the evidence "strongly indicates that circumcised men are at lower risk ... syphilis."<ref>{{cite journal |title=Male circumcision and risk of syphilis, chancroid, and genital herpes: a systematic review and meta-analysis |first=HA |last=Weiss |coauthors=Thomas, SL; Munabi SK; Hayes RJ |journal=Sex Transm Infect |year=2006 |month=Apr |volume=82 |issue=2 |pages=101-9 |id=PMID 16581731 |url=http://sti.bmj.com/cgi/content/full/82/2/101}}</ref>
+
In 1855, the [[Quaker]] surgeon, Jonathan Hutchinson, observed that circumcision appeared to protect against [[syphilis]].<ref>J. Hutchinson, On the influence of circumcision in preventing syphilis, ''Medical Times and Gazette'' II (1855): 542&ndash;3.</ref>  
  
As [[hospital]]s proliferated in urban areas, [[childbirth]], at least among the upper and middle classes, was increasingly under the care of physicians in hospitals rather than with [[midwife|midwives]] in the home. It has been suggested that once a critical mass of infants were being circumcised in the hospital, circumcision became a class marker of those wealthy enough to afford a hospital birth.<ref>{{cite journal |url=http://www.cirp.org/library/legal/USA/waldeck1/ |title=Using Male Circumcision to Understand Social Norms as Multipliers |journal=UNIVERSITY OF CINCINNATI LAW REVIEW |first=S.E. |last=Waldeck |year=2003 |volume=72 |issue=2 |pages=455-526}}</ref>
+
As [[hospital]]s proliferated in urban areas, [[childbirth]], at least among the upper and middle classes, was increasingly under the care of physicians in hospitals rather than with [[midwife|midwives]] in the home. It has been suggested that once a critical mass of infants were being circumcised in the hospital, circumcision became a class marker of those wealthy enough to afford a hospital birth. The influence of Jewish doctors in the American medical professions has also been suggested.
  
By the 1920s, advances in the understanding of disease had undermined much of the original medical basis for preventive circumcision but doctors continued to promote it as good penile hygiene and as a preventive for  balanitis, phimosis, and penile cancer.
+
By the 1920s, advances in the understanding of disease had challenged some of the original medical basis for preventive circumcision but doctors continued to promote it as good penile hygiene and as a preventive for  [[balanitis]], [[phimosis]], and [[penile cancer]].
  
Infant circumcision was taken up in the [[United States]], [[Australia]] and the English-speaking parts of [[Canada]] and to a lesser extent in the [[United Kingdom]] and [[New Zealand]]. The British Royal Family had a long tradition requiring that all male children be circumcised” (Alfred J. Kolatach’s The Jewish Book of Why, Middle Village, New York; Jonathan David, 1981). Although it is difficult to determine historical circumcision rates, one estimate[http://www.boystoo.com/history/statistics.htm] of infant circumcision rates in the United States holds that 30% of newborn American boys were being circumcised in 1900, 55 percent in 1925, and 72 percent.
+
Infant circumcision was taken up in the [[United States]], [[Australia]] and the English-speaking parts of [[Canada]] and to a lesser extent in the [[United Kingdom]] and [[New Zealand]]. The British Royal Family had a long tradition requiring that all male children be circumcised. Although it is difficult to determine historical circumcision rates, one estimate of infant circumcision rates in the United States holds that 30 percent of newborn American boys were being circumcised in 1900, 55 percent in 1925, and 72 percent by 1950.<ref>BoyStoo, Circumcision Statistics of the 20th Century.</ref>
  
 
===Circumcision since 1950===
 
===Circumcision since 1950===
In 1949, the United Kingdom's newly formed [[National Health Service]] removed infant circumcision from its list of covered services. One reason may have been Douglas Gairdner’s famous study, ''The fate of the foreskin'', which revealed that for the years 1942&ndash;1947, about 16 children per year in England and Wales had died because of circumcision, a rate of about 1 per 6000 circumcisions.<ref name = "Gairdner" /> Since then, circumcision has been an [[Out-of-pocket expenses|out-of-pocket cost]] to parents, and the proportion of newborns circumcised in England and Wales has fallen to less than one percent.
+
In 1949, the United Kingdom's newly formed [[National Health Service]] removed infant circumcision from its list of covered services. Since then, circumcision has been an [[Out-of-pocket expenses|out-of-pocket cost]] to parents, and the proportion of newborns circumcised in England and Wales has fallen to less than one percent.
  
 
In Canada (where public medical insurance is universal, and where private insurance does not replicate services already paid from the public purse), individual provincial health services began delisting circumcision in the 1980s. The infant circumcision rate in Canada has fallen from roughly 50 percent in the 1970s to 13.9 percent in 2003. However, the figures varied from 29.5 percent on Prince Edward Island to zero in Newfoundland and Labrador.  
 
In Canada (where public medical insurance is universal, and where private insurance does not replicate services already paid from the public purse), individual provincial health services began delisting circumcision in the 1980s. The infant circumcision rate in Canada has fallen from roughly 50 percent in the 1970s to 13.9 percent in 2003. However, the figures varied from 29.5 percent on Prince Edward Island to zero in Newfoundland and Labrador.  
Line 375: Line 120:
 
In [[South Korea]], circumcision grew in popularity following the establishment of the United States trusteeship in 1945 and the spread of American influence. More than 90 percent of South Korean high-school boys are now circumcised, but the average age of circumcision is 12 years.
 
In [[South Korea]], circumcision grew in popularity following the establishment of the United States trusteeship in 1945 and the spread of American influence. More than 90 percent of South Korean high-school boys are now circumcised, but the average age of circumcision is 12 years.
  
In some [[South Africa]]n ethnic groups, circumcision has roots in several belief systems, and is performed most of the time on teenage boys:
+
Prior to 1989, the [[American Academy of Pediatrics]] had a long-standing opinion that medical indications for routine circumcision were lacking. This stance, according to the AMA, was reversed in 1989, following new evidence of reduction in risk of urinary tract infection. A study in 1987 found that the prominent reasons for parents choosing circumcision were "concerns about the attitudes of peers and their sons' self concept in the future," rather than medical concerns.<ref>AA Publications, [http://pediatrics.aappublications.org/cgi/content/abstract/80/2/215 Circumcision Decision: Prominence of Social Concerns.] Retrieved October 9, 2007.</ref> A 1999 study reported that reasons for circumcision included "ease of hygiene [67 percent], ease of infant circumcision compared with adult circumcision (63 percent), medical benefit (41 percent), and father circumcised [37 percent]." The authors commented that "Medical benefits were cited more frequently in this study than in past studies, although medical issues remain secondary to hygiene and convenience."<ref>www.cirp.org, [http://www.cirp.org/library/procedure/tiemstra/ ''Factors Affecting the Circumcision Decision.''] Retrieved October 20, 2007.</ref>
:''"...The young men in the eastern Cape belong to the Xhosa ethnic group for whom circumcision is considered part of the passage into manhood... A law was recently introduced requiring initiation schools to be licensed and only allowing circumcisions to be performed on youths aged 18 and older. But Eastern Cape provincial Health Department spokesman Sizwe Kupelo told Reuters news agency that boys as young as 11 had died. Each year thousands of young men go into the bush alone, without water, to attend initiation schools. Many do not survive the ordeal..."'' [http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/3069491.stm].
 
 
 
Prior to 1989, the American Academy of Pediatrics had a long-standing opinion that medical indications for routine circumcision were lacking. This stance, according to the AMA, was reversed in 1989, following new evidence of reduction in risk of urinary tract infection. A study in 1987 found that the prominent reasons for parents choosing circumcision were "concerns about the attitudes of peers and their sons' self concept in the future," rather than medical concerns.[http://pediatrics.aappublications.org/cgi/content/abstract/80/2/215] A 1999 study reported that reasons for circumcision included "ease of hygiene [67 percent], ease of infant circumcision compared with adult circumcision (63 percent), medical benefit (41 percent), and father circumcised [37 percent]." The authors commented that "Medical benefits were cited more frequently in this study than in past studies, although medical issues remain secondary to hygience and convenience."[http://www.cirp.org/library/procedure/tiemstra/]  
 
  
A 2001 study reported that "The most important reason to circumcise or not circumcise the child was health reasons."<ref name="adler">{{cite journal |url=http://pediatrics.aappublications.org/cgi/content/full/107/2/e20 |title=Circumcision: we have heard from the experts; now let's hear from the parents |first=R |last=Adler |coauthors=''et al'' |journal=Pediatrics |year=2001 |volume=107 |issue=2 |pages=E20}}</ref> A 2005 study speculated that increased recognition of the potential benefits may be responsible for an observed increase in the rate of neonatal circumcision in the United States between 1988 and 2000.[http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=pubmed&dopt=Abstract&list_uids=15711354&query_hl=1&itool=pubmed_docsum]
+
A 2001 study reported that "The most important reason to circumcise or not circumcise the child was health reasons."<ref>R. Adler,  et al., [http://pediatrics.aappublications.org/cgi/content/full/107/2/e20 Circumcision: We have heard from the experts; now let's hear from the parents,] ''Journal of Pediatrics'' 107 (2) 2001: E20. Retrieved October 20, 2007.</ref> A 2005 study speculated that increased recognition of the potential benefits may be responsible for an observed increase in the rate of neonatal circumcision in the United States between 1988 and 2000.<ref>National Institute of Health, [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=pubmed&dopt=Abstract&list_uids=15711354&query_hl=1&itool=pubmed_docsum The increasing incidence of newborn circumcision.] Retrieved October 9, 2007.</ref>
In a 2001 survey, 86.6 percent of parents felt respected by their medical provider, and parents who did not circumcise "felt less respected by their medical provider".<ref name="adler" />
 
 
 
The major medical societies in Britain, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand do not support routine non-therapeutic infant circumcision. Major medical organizations in the United States do not recommend routine circumcision, but instead state that parents should decide what is in their child's best interests.
 
 
 
The AMA remarked that, in one study, physicians in "nearly half" of neonatal circumcisions "did not discuss the potential medical risks and benefits of elective circumcision prior to delivery of the infant son. Deferral of discussion until after birth, combined with the fact that many parents' decisions about circumcision are preconceived, contribute to the high rate of elective circumcision."<ref name="CSA:I-99" />
 
 
 
{| border="2" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" style="margin-left:auto; margin-right:auto; border-collapse: collapse; border:1px solid #999"
 
|+'''Table 1: International circumcision rates'''
 
|- bgcolor="#f2f2f2"
 
! Country
 
! Year
 
! Neonatal circumcisions (%)
 
|-
 
| United States
 
| 2003
 
| 55.9%* [http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/series/sr_13/sr13_160.pdf]
 
|-
 
| Canada
 
| 2003
 
| &lt; 14% [http://www.cirp.org/news/2006-03-23montrealgazette/]
 
|-
 
| Australia
 
| 2004
 
| 10%-20% [http://www.racp.edu.au/index.cfm?objectid=A4268489-2A57-5487-DEF14F15791C4F22]
 
|-
 
| New Zealand
 
| 1995
 
| 0-5%[http://www.racp.edu.au/hpu/paed/circumcision/summary.htm]
 
|-
 
|- style="border-top:1px solid #999; border-bottom: hidden; border-left: hidden; border-right: hidden;"
 
| colspan="3" | <small>*The percentage refers to infants born in non-Federal hospitals; see p 52, Table 44 of the reference.</small>
 
|- style="border-top: hidden; border-bottom: hidden; border-left: hidden; border-right: hidden;"
 
| colspan="3" | <small>**Samoans, Tongans and Niueans in New Zealand continue to practice circumcision, but not in public hospitals, to which these data refer.</small>
 
|}
 
  
 
==Notes==
 
==Notes==
<div class="references-small" style="-moz-column-count:2; column-count:2;">
+
<references/>
<references />
 
</div>
 
  
 
==References==
 
==References==
*Gollaher, David L. ''Circumcision: A History of the World's Most Controversial Surgery'', Basic Books, 2001. ISBN 978-0465026531
+
* Glick, Leonard B. ''Marked in Your Flesh: Circumcision from Ancient Judea to Modern America''. Oxford University Press, 2006. ISBN 978-0195315943.
*Glick, Leonard B. ''Marked in Your Flesh: Circumcision from Ancient Judea to Modern America'', Oxford University Press, 2006. ISBN 978-0195315943
+
* Goldman, Ronald. ''Questioning Circumcision: A Jewish Perspective''. Vanguard Publications, 1997. ISBN 978-0964489561.
*Goldman, Ronald. ''Questioning Circumcision: A Jewish Perspective'', Vanguard Publications, 1997. ISBN 978-0964489561
+
* Gollaher, David L. ''Circumcision: A History of the World's Most Controversial Surgery''. Basic Books, 2001. ISBN 978-0465026531.
*Ritter, Thomas J. ''Doctors Re-examine Circumcision'', Third Millennium Publishers, 2001. ISBN 978-0971187801
+
* Ritter, Thomas J. ''Doctors Re-examine Circumcision''. Third Millennium Publishers, 2001. ISBN 0971187800.
  
 
==External links==
 
==External links==
* [http://www.cirp.org The Circumcision Information and Resource Pages] by Geoffrey T. Falk
+
All links retrieved December 10, 2023.
* [http://www.doctorsopposingcircumcision.org Doctors Opposing Circumcision] presided by George C. Denniston, MD, MPH
+
* [http://www.cirp.org The Circumcision Information and Resource Pages] by Geoffrey T. Falk. ''www.cirp.org''.
 
+
* [http://www.doctorsopposingcircumcision.org Doctors Opposing Circumcision] presided by George Denniston, MD, MPH. ''www.doctorsopposingcircumcision.org''.  
==Further reading==
 
<!-- The following references should be moved into cite tags as in [[#Risks of circumcision]], above. —>
 
* Billy Ray Boyd. ''Circumcision Exposed: Rethinking a Medical and Cultural Tradition.'' Freedom, CA: The Crossing Press, 1998. (ISBN 978-0-89594-939-4)
 
* Anne Briggs. ''Circumcision: What Every Parent Should Know.'' Charlottesville, VA: Birth & Parenting Publications, 1985. (ISBN 978-0-9615484-0-7)
 
* Robert Darby. ''A surgical temptation: The demonization of the foreskin and the rise of circumcision in Britain.'' Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2005. (ISBN 978-0-226-13645-5)
 
* Aaron J. Fink, M.D. ''Circumcision: A Parent's Decision for Life''. Kavanah Publishing Company, Inc., 1988. (ISBN 978-0-9621347-0-8)
 
* Paul M. Fleiss, M.D. and Frederick Hodges, D. Phil. ''What Your Doctor May'' Not ''Tell You About Circumcision.'' New York: Warner Books, 2002. (ISBN 978-0-446-67880-3)
 
* Leonard B. Glick. ''Marked in Your Flesh: Circumcision from Ancient Judea to Modern America.'' New York: Oxford University Press, 2005. (ISBN 978-0-19-517674-2)
 
* David L. Gollaher. ''Circumcision: A History of the World's Most Controversial Surgery.'' New York: Basic Books, 2000. (ISBN 0465026532)
 
* Ronald Goldman, Ph.D. ''Circumcision: The Hidden Trauma.'' Boston: Vanguard, 1996. (ISBN 978-0-9644895-3-0)
 
* Paysach J. Krohn, Rabbi. ''Bris Milah. Circumcision-The Covenant Of Abraham/A Compendium of Laws, Rituals, And Customs From Birth To Bris, Anthologized From Talmudic, And Traditional Sources.'' New York: Mesorah Publications, 1985, 2005.
 
* Brian J. Morris, Ph.D., D.Sc. ''In Favour of Circumcision.'' Sydney: UNSW Press, 1999. (ISBN 978-0-86840-537-7)
 
* Rosemary Romberg. ''Circumcision: The Painful Dilemma.'' South Hadley, MA Bergan & Garvey, 1985. (ISBN 978-0-89789-073-1)
 
* Edgar J Schoen, M.D. ''Ed Schoen, MD on Circumcision.'' Berkeley, CA: RDR Books, 2005. (ISBN 978-1-57143-123-3)
 
* Edward Wallerstein. ''Circumcision: An American Health Fallacy.'' New York: Springer, 1980 (ISBN 978-0-8261-3240-6)
 
* Gerald N. Weiss M.D. and Andrea W Harter. ''Circumcision: Frankly Speaking.'' Wiser Publications, 1998. (ISBN 978-0-9667219-0-4)
 
* Yosef David Weisberg, Rabbi. ''Otzar Habris. Encyclopedia of the laws and customs of Bris Milah and Pidyon Haben.'' Jerusalem: Hamoer, 2002.
 
  
<!-- Categorization —>
 
 
[[Category:philosophy and religion]]
 
[[Category:philosophy and religion]]
 
{{Credit|152434571}}
 
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Latest revision as of 22:23, 10 December 2023


Family circumcision set and case, c. eighteenth century wooden box covered in cow hide with silver implements: Silver trays, clip, pointer, silver flask, spice vessel.

Male Circumcision is a surgical procedure that removes some or all of the foreskin (prepuce) from the penis. The word "circumcision" comes from Latin circum (meaning "around") and caedere (meaning "to cut").

Circumcision predates recorded human history, with depictions in stone-age cave drawings and Ancient Egyptian tombs. Theories regarding it include that circumcision is a form of ritual sacrifice or offering, a health precaution, a sign of submission to a deity, a rite of passage to adulthood, a mark of defeat or slavery, or an attempt to alter aesthetics or sexuality.

Male circumcision is a religious commandment in Judaism, expected in Islam, and customary in some Oriental Orthodox and other Christian churches in Africa. On the other hand, it is condemned as contrary to Christian practice for Gentile Christians by the Apostle Paul and some church councils. Circumcision is common in the Middle East, North America (U.S. and Canada), Australia, and parts of Africa and Asia, especially the Philippines and South Korea. According to the World Health Organization (WHO), 30 percent of men worldwide have had the procedure.

Opponents condemn male infant circumcision as a human rights abuse and a genital mutilation similar to female genital cutting, while advocates of circumcision regard it as a worthwhile public health measure. Although the medical justification for circumcision remains controversial, since March 2007, the WHO and other international organizations recognize male circumcision as an efficacious intervention for HIV prevention, while cautioning that it only provides partial protection and should not replace other interventions to prevent the transmission of HIV.[1]

Cultures and religions

The time of circumcision differs from culture to culture: either shortly after birth, during childhood or around puberty as part of a rite of passage. In terms of religion, it is most prevalent in the Jewish and Muslim faiths. It is less common in Europe, Latin America, China, and India.

Judaism

Abraham and Isaac. The covenant of circumcision was initiated through Abraham and carried on through his descendants, centering on Isaac.

Circumcision is a fundamental rite of Judaism, initiated as a sign of God's covenant with Abraham and his descendants. It is a positive commandment obligatory under Jewish law for Jewish males, and is only postponed or abrogated in the case of threat to the life or health of the child. It is usually performed in a ceremony called a Brit milah (or Bris milah, colloquially simply bris) (Hebrew for "Covenant of circumcision"). A mohel performs the ceremony on the eighth day after birth unless health reasons force a delay. According to the Torah (Genesis, chapter 17 verses 9-14), God commanded Abraham to circumcise himself, his offspring, and his slaves as a sign of an everlasting covenant:

God also said to Abraham: “On your part, you and your descendants after you must keep my covenant throughout the ages. This is my covenant with you and your descendants after you that you must keep: every male among you shall be circumcised. Circumcise the flesh of your foreskin, and that shall be the mark of the covenant between you and me."

According to Jewish law, failure to follow the commandment carries the penalty of karet, or being cut off from the community by God. Brit milah is considered to be so important that should the eighth day fall on the Sabbath, actions that would normally be forbidden because of the sanctity of the day are permitted in order to fulfill the requirement to circumcise. The expressly ritual element of circumcision in Judaism, as distinguished from its non-ritual requirement in Islam, is shown by the requirement in Orthodox tradition that a child who either is born aposthetic (without a foreskin) or who has been circumcised without the ritual must nevertheless undergo a Brit milah in which a drop of blood (hatafat-dam, הטפת דם) is drawn from the penis at the point where the foreskin would have been or was attached.

Christianity

According to the Gospel of Luke, Jesus himself was circumcised on the eighth day. However, Christianity does not call for circumcision, especially as it pertains to Gentile Christians. Saint Paul was particularly adamant in his opinion against the circumcision of Gentile believers.

Was anyone called while circumcised? Let him not become uncircumcised. Was anyone called while uncircumcised? Let him not be circumcised. Circumcision is nothing and uncircumcision is nothing, but keeping the commandments of God is what matters (I Corinthians 7:18-19).

The original apostles and Christian believers were Jews, who practiced the commandment to circumcise their sons. However, a question arose as to whether or not Gentiles who accepted Jesus as the Messiah needed to be circumcised. The meeting between Paul and the senior apostles known as the Council of Jerusalem declared that circumcision was not necessary for Gentile believers. However, the council did not directly deal with the question of Jewish Christians circumcising their sons. St. Paul had his disciple Timothy circumcised (Acts 16:3). In Acts 21, Paul made a public act of purification in the Temple of Jerusalem to demonstrate that the charges against him—of teaching that Jewish Christians should not circumcise their sons—were untrue. Acts records the following instruction to Paul from James the Just, head of Jerusalem church and identified as "the Lord's brother:"

We (Jewish Christians in Jerusalem) have been informed that you teach all the Jews who live among the Gentiles to turn away from Moses, telling them not to circumcise their children… There are four men with us who have made a vow. Take these men, join in their purification rites and pay their expenses… Then everybody will know there is no truth in these reports about you (Acts 21: 20-24).

However, in his letters, Paul strictly warned Gentile Christians against adopting the practice of circumcision and downplayed its significance for Jews. Despite his statement in First Corinthians about the importance of keeping the commandments, in another of his letters Paul argued that keeping faith in Christ alone—not keeping the Jewish ceremonial laws—brought salvation.

After the destruction of the Temple in 70 C.E., Christianity took on a less Jewish character, and was soon to become an essentially Gentile religion, in which Paul's teachings against circumcision were the norm. Although some Christians still practiced it, at the Council of Basel-Florence in 1442, the Catholic Church condemned circumcision among the Copts and ordered against its practice. During the Spanish Inquisition, inspectors considered the circumcision of the sons of Jewish converts to Christianity to be evidence that the convert was insincere in his conversion, which was a capital crime.[2]

Nevertheless, some mainstream Christian traditions still keep a "Feast of the Circumcision," commemorating Jesus' own circumcision on the eight day after his birth. The Greek Orthodox Church celebrates the Circumcision of Christ on January 1, while those Orthodox churches following the Julian calendar celebrate it on January 14. The Russian Orthodox Church considers it a "Great Feast." In the Catholic, Anglican and Lutheran churches it has been replaced by other commemorations. Roman Catholics celebrate January 1 as the Solemnity of Mary, the Mother of God, and it remains a holy day of obligation.

Eastern Christians never wholly abolished the practice of circumcision, and the Abyssinians, living among largely Muslim populations, find it a useful hygienic precaution. It is also customary among the Coptic, Ethiopian, and Eritrean Orthodox Churches, and also some other African churches. In the U.S., most Protestants and many Catholics have their sons circumcised for hygienic reasons, and the practice has become increasingly common in Europe as well.

Islam

A troupe dancing at Sultan Ahmed III's 14-day celebration of his sons' circumcision in 1720. Miniature from the Surname-i Vehbi, Topkapı Palace, Istanbul.

The origin of circumcision in Islam is a matter of religious and scholarly debate. It is mentioned in some hadith, but not in the Qur'an itself. Some Islamic scholars hold that circumcision is recommended, others that it is obligatory.[3] However, no uncircumcised male may lawfully make the pilgrimage to Mecca, which is a required act of all Muslims capable of making the journey. [4] The timing of Muslim circumcision varies. Arabs traditionally performed the operation at the onset of puberty, and it is thought the Prophet himself was circumcised in this way. Turkish, Balkan, rural Egyptians, and Central and South Asian Muslims typically circumcise boys between the ages of six and 11. Traditionally, Turkish circumcisions are celebrated with sweets and the "Sünnet Düğünü," or "Circumcision Feast/Celebration." It is considered a very important celebration in man's life as a passage to manhood. However, in the middle-class, circumcision is more usually done in infancy.

In Pakistan, Muslims may be circumcised at all ages from the newborn period to adulthood, though the medical profession has encouraged circumcisions in the first week after birth to reduce complications.

In Iran, circumcision was traditionally practiced at the onset of puberty, but is now usually performed at the age of five or six for children born at home, or at two days old for those born in hospitals.[5] A Muslim Iranian boy must be circumcised by puberty if he is to participate normally in religious activities.

Other traditions

Circumcision is part of the initiation rites in some African, Pacific Islander, and Australian aboriginal traditions in areas such as Arnhem Land, where the practice was introduced by Makassan traders from Sulawesi in the Indonesian Archipelago.

A Dogon painting in a "circumcision cave."

In West Africa infant circumcision may have had tribal significance as a rite of passage. Today in some non-Muslim Nigerian societies it is medicalized and is simply a cultural norm. Among some West African animist groups, such as the Dogon and Dowayo, it is taken to represent a removal of "feminine" aspects of the male, turning boys into fully masculine males. In additional African societies, circumcision has become medicalized and is simply performed in infancy without any particular conscious cultural significance. Among the Urhobo of southern Nigeria it is symbolic of a boy entering into manhood. The ritual expression, Omo te Oshare ("the boy is now man"), constitutes a rite of passage from one age set to another.

For Nilotic peoples, such as the Kalenjin and Maasai, circumcision is a rite of passage observed collectively by a number of boys every few years, and boys circumcised at the same time are taken to be members of a single age set. Authority derives from the age-group and the age-set. Prior to circumcision a natural leader, or olaiguenani, is selected; he leads his age-group through a series of rituals until old age, sharing responsibility with a select few, of whom the ritual expert (oloiboni) is the ultimate authority. Masai youths are not circumcised until they are mature, and a new age-set is initiated together at regular intervals of 12 to 15 years. The young warriors (ilmurran) remain initiates for some time, using blunt arrows to hunt small birds which are stuffed and tied to a frame to form a head-dress.

Circumcision ceremonies among certain Australian aboriginal societies are noted for their painful nature, including subincision for some aboriginal peoples in the Western Desert.

In the Pacific, ritual circumcision is nearly universal in the Melanesian islands of Fiji and Vanuatu; participation in the traditional land diving on Pentecost Island is reserved for those who have been circumcised. Circumcision is also commonly practiced in the Polynesian islands of Samoa, Tonga, Niue, and Tikopia. In Samoa, it is accompanied by a celebration.

Circumcision in South Korea is largely the result of American cultural and military influence following the Korean War. The origin of circumcision in the Philippines is uncertain, with both western and Muslim influence being probable factors.

Ethical issues

Circumcising infants is controversial. Those advocating circumcision assert that circumcision is a significant public health measure, preventing infections, and slowing down the spread of AIDS. However some medical associations in the United States, Australia, and Canada do not recommend the routine, non-therapeutic circumcision of newborns.

Views differ on whether limits should be placed on caregivers having a child circumcised. Opponents argue that the medical benefits of circumcision are uncertain, and that removal of healthy genital tissue from a minor should therefore not be subject to parental discretion. Some also suggest that physicians who perform the procedure are not acting in accordance with their ethical duties to the patient, regardless of parental consent. Others argue that there is no convincing evidence of sexual or emotional harm in male circumcision, and that there are much greater monetary and psychological costs in circumcising later rather than in infancy.

Traditionally, circumcision has been presumed to be legal when performed by a trained operator. In 2001, Sweden allowed only persons certified by the National Board of Health to circumcise infants, requiring a medical doctor or an anesthesia nurse to accompany the circumciser and for anesthetic to be applied beforehand. Jews and Muslims in Sweden objected to the new law, saying it violates their religious rights. In 2001, the World Jewish Congress stated that it was “the first legal restriction on Jewish religious practice in Europe since the Nazi era.”[6] However, in 2006, the United States State Department reported that most Jewish mohels had been certified under the law and 3000 Muslim and 40 to 50 Jewish boys were circumcised each year.

The American Academy of Pediatrics (1999) stated "a survey of adult males using self-report suggests more varied sexual practice and less sexual dysfunction in circumcised adult men." In January 2007, The American Academy of Family Physicians (AAFP) stated: "No valid evidence to date, however, supports the notion that being circumcised affects sexual sensation or satisfaction." However, Boyle et al. (2002) argued that circumcision removes tissues with "heightened erogenous sensitivity."[7] They concluded that, "Evidence has also started to accumulate that male circumcision may result in lifelong physical, sexual, and sometimes psychological harm as well."

Medical aspects

The British Medical Association, states “there is significant disagreement about whether circumcision is overall a beneficial, neutral or harmful procedure. At present, the medical literature on the health, including sexual health, implications of circumcision is contradictory, and often subject to claims of bias in research.” Cost-benefit analyses have varied.

The risk in a competently performed medical circumcision is very low. According to the American Medical Association AMA, blood loss and infection are the most common complications. Bleeding is mostly minor; applying pressure will stop it. However, in poorly carried out circumcisions, complications from bleeding and infection can be catastrophic.

Observational studies in the 1980's identified a strong association of circumcision status and a reduced risk of HIV infection, as well as of sexually transmitted genital ulcer disease, although behavioral factors may have been a part of that association. A 2007 study made by the U.S. National Institutes of Health revealed "an approximate halving of risk of HIV infection in men who were circumcised" in Kenya and Uganda. These results support the findings of a French study of South African men published in late 2005, which demonstrated "at least a 60 percent reduction in HIV infection among circumcised men."[8]

Smegma—a combination of exfoliated epithelial cells, transudated skin oils, and moisture that can accumulate under the foreskin of males and within the female vulva area—is common to all mammals, male and female. In some cases, accumulating smegma may help cause inflammation of the glans. It also has a strong odor. Circumcision helps control the accumulation of smegma, but proper hygiene can also do this.

The American Academy of Pediatrics observes “There is little evidence to affirm the association between circumcision status and optimal penile hygiene.”[9] However, it also states that the "relationship among hygiene, phimosis (difficulty in retracting the foreskin), and penile cancer is uncertain." The Royal Australasian College of Physicians emphasizes that the penis of an uncircumcised infant requires no special care and should be left alone.

Circumcision procedures

Circumcision removes the foreskin from the penis. For infant circumcision in modern hospital procedures, clamps, such as the Gomco clamp, Plastibell, and Mogen clamp are often used. Clamps are designed to cut the blood supply to the foreskin, stop any bleeding and protect the glans. Before using a clamp, the foreskin and the glans are separated with a blunt probe and/or curved hemostat.

  • With a Gomco clamp, a section of skin is first crushed with a hemostat then slit with scissors. The foreskin is drawn over the bell shaped portion of the clamp and inserted through a hole in the base of the clamp and the clamp is tightened, "crushing the foreskin between the bell and the base plate." The crushing limits bleeding (provides hemostasis). While the flared bottom of the bell fits tightly against the hole of the base plate, the foreskin is then cut away with a scalpel from above the base plate. The bell prevents the glans being reached by the scalpel.
  • With a Mogen clamp, the foreskin is grabbed dorsally with a straight hemostat, and lifted up. The Mogen clamp is then slid between the glans and hemostat, following the angle of the corona to avoid removing excess skin ventrally and to obtain a superior cosmetic result, than with Gomco or Plastibell circumcisions. The clamp is locked shut, and a scalpel is used to cut the foreskin from the flat (upper) side of the clamp. The frenulum is cut if frenular chordee is evident.
  • With the Plastibell clamp, the foreskin and the clamp come away in three to seven days.

Early history of circumcision

It is possible that circumcision arose independently in different cultures for different reasons. It has been variously proposed that circumcision began as a religious sacrifice, as a rite of passage marking a boy's entrance into adulthood, as a form of sympathetic magic to ensure virility, as a means of suppressing (or enhancing) sexual pleasure, as an aid to hygiene where regular bathing was impractical, as a means of marking those of lower (or higher) social status, as a means of differentiating a circumcising group from their non-circumcising neighbors, as a means of discouraging masturbation or other socially proscribed sexual behaviors, to remove "excess" pleasure, to increase a man's attractiveness to women, as a symbolic castration, as a demonstration of one's ability to endure pain, or as a male counterpart to menstruation or the breaking of the hymen. It also has been suggested that the custom of circumcision gave advantages to tribes that practiced it and thus led to its spread regardless of whether the people understood this.

Circumcision in the ancient world

The oldest documentary evidence for circumcision comes from ancient Egypt. Tomb artwork from the Sixth Dynasty (2345-2181 B.C.E.) shows men with circumcised penises, and one relief from this period shows the rite being performed on a standing adult male. The Egyptian hieroglyph for "penis" depicts either a circumcised or an erect organ. The examination of Egyptian mummies has found some with foreskins and others who were circumcised.

Circumcision was common, although not universal, among ancient Semitic peoples. The Book of Jeremiah, written in the sixth century B.C.E., lists the Egyptians, Jews, Edomites, Ammonites, and Moabites as circumcising cultures. Herodotus, writing in the fifth century B.C.E., would add the Colchians, Ethiopians, Phoenicians, and Syrians to that list.

In the aftermath of the conquests of Alexander the Great, Greek dislike of circumcision led to a decline in its incidence among many peoples that had previously practiced it. The writer of the 1 Maccabees wrote that under the Seleucids, many Jewish men attempted to hide or reverse their circumcision so they could exercise in Greek gymnasia, where nudity was the norm. First Maccabees also relates that the Seleucids forbade the practice of brit milah (Jewish circumcision), and punished those who performed it—as well as the infants who underwent it—with death.

Medical circumcision modern times

There are several hypotheses to explain why infant circumcision was accepted in the United States about the year 1900. The success of the germ theory of disease made surgery safer, and made the public deeply suspicious of dirt and bodily secretions. So smegma—which collects under the foreskin—was viewed as unhealthy, and circumcision was seen as good penile hygiene.

In 1855, the Quaker surgeon, Jonathan Hutchinson, observed that circumcision appeared to protect against syphilis.[10]

As hospitals proliferated in urban areas, childbirth, at least among the upper and middle classes, was increasingly under the care of physicians in hospitals rather than with midwives in the home. It has been suggested that once a critical mass of infants were being circumcised in the hospital, circumcision became a class marker of those wealthy enough to afford a hospital birth. The influence of Jewish doctors in the American medical professions has also been suggested.

By the 1920s, advances in the understanding of disease had challenged some of the original medical basis for preventive circumcision but doctors continued to promote it as good penile hygiene and as a preventive for balanitis, phimosis, and penile cancer.

Infant circumcision was taken up in the United States, Australia and the English-speaking parts of Canada and to a lesser extent in the United Kingdom and New Zealand. The British Royal Family had a long tradition requiring that all male children be circumcised. Although it is difficult to determine historical circumcision rates, one estimate of infant circumcision rates in the United States holds that 30 percent of newborn American boys were being circumcised in 1900, 55 percent in 1925, and 72 percent by 1950.[11]

Circumcision since 1950

In 1949, the United Kingdom's newly formed National Health Service removed infant circumcision from its list of covered services. Since then, circumcision has been an out-of-pocket cost to parents, and the proportion of newborns circumcised in England and Wales has fallen to less than one percent.

In Canada (where public medical insurance is universal, and where private insurance does not replicate services already paid from the public purse), individual provincial health services began delisting circumcision in the 1980s. The infant circumcision rate in Canada has fallen from roughly 50 percent in the 1970s to 13.9 percent in 2003. However, the figures varied from 29.5 percent on Prince Edward Island to zero in Newfoundland and Labrador.

In South Korea, circumcision grew in popularity following the establishment of the United States trusteeship in 1945 and the spread of American influence. More than 90 percent of South Korean high-school boys are now circumcised, but the average age of circumcision is 12 years.

Prior to 1989, the American Academy of Pediatrics had a long-standing opinion that medical indications for routine circumcision were lacking. This stance, according to the AMA, was reversed in 1989, following new evidence of reduction in risk of urinary tract infection. A study in 1987 found that the prominent reasons for parents choosing circumcision were "concerns about the attitudes of peers and their sons' self concept in the future," rather than medical concerns.[12] A 1999 study reported that reasons for circumcision included "ease of hygiene [67 percent], ease of infant circumcision compared with adult circumcision (63 percent), medical benefit (41 percent), and father circumcised [37 percent]." The authors commented that "Medical benefits were cited more frequently in this study than in past studies, although medical issues remain secondary to hygiene and convenience."[13]

A 2001 study reported that "The most important reason to circumcise or not circumcise the child was health reasons."[14] A 2005 study speculated that increased recognition of the potential benefits may be responsible for an observed increase in the rate of neonatal circumcision in the United States between 1988 and 2000.[15]

Notes

  1. WHO, Statement on Kenyan and Ugandan trial findings regarding male circumcision and HIV. Retrieved October 9, 2007.
  2. CD Library, Inquisition and the Crypto-Jewish Community. Retrieved October 9, 2007.
  3. Al-Munajjid, Muhammed Salih, Question #9412: Circumcision: how it is done and the rulings on it, www.islam-qa.com. Retrieved October 20, 2007.
  4. www.circlist.com, Traditional Muslim Male Circumcision. Retrieved October 9, 2007.
  5. Paula E. Drew and F. A. Sadeghpour (eds.), The International Encyclopedia of Sexuality (Iran), Continuum Publishing Company.
  6. Canadian Children's Rights Council, Jews protest Swedish circumcision restriction. Retrieved October 20, 2007.
  7. Gregory J. Boyle, J. Steven Svoboda, Ronald Goldman, and Ephrem Fernandez, Male circumcision: Pain, trauma, and psychosexual sequelae, Bond University Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, 2002. epublications.bond.edu.au. Retrieved October 20, 2007.
  8. WHO, Statement on Kenyan and Ugandan trial findings regarding male circumcision and HIV. Retrieved October 9, 2007.
  9. Although the Academy's 1975 statement asserted that "A program of education leading to continuing good personal hygiene would offer all the advantages of circumcision without the attendant surgical risk," the 1999 statement cites a study which found that "appropriate hygiene decreased significantly the incidence of phimosis, adhesions, and inflammation, but did not eliminate all problems."
  10. J. Hutchinson, On the influence of circumcision in preventing syphilis, Medical Times and Gazette II (1855): 542–3.
  11. BoyStoo, Circumcision Statistics of the 20th Century.
  12. AA Publications, Circumcision Decision: Prominence of Social Concerns. Retrieved October 9, 2007.
  13. www.cirp.org, Factors Affecting the Circumcision Decision. Retrieved October 20, 2007.
  14. R. Adler, et al., Circumcision: We have heard from the experts; now let's hear from the parents, Journal of Pediatrics 107 (2) 2001: E20. Retrieved October 20, 2007.
  15. National Institute of Health, The increasing incidence of newborn circumcision. Retrieved October 9, 2007.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Glick, Leonard B. Marked in Your Flesh: Circumcision from Ancient Judea to Modern America. Oxford University Press, 2006. ISBN 978-0195315943.
  • Goldman, Ronald. Questioning Circumcision: A Jewish Perspective. Vanguard Publications, 1997. ISBN 978-0964489561.
  • Gollaher, David L. Circumcision: A History of the World's Most Controversial Surgery. Basic Books, 2001. ISBN 978-0465026531.
  • Ritter, Thomas J. Doctors Re-examine Circumcision. Third Millennium Publishers, 2001. ISBN 0971187800.

External links

All links retrieved December 10, 2023.

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