His genitals are mutilated with the removal of the prepuce or foreskin and he is the subject of further religious ceremonies all of which are called a bris. The mutilation is not carried out by all Jews as not all Jews accept the torah as the word of God.
Answer:
Circumcision is one of the few observances, like Yom Kippur, that are common to Orthodox, Reform and Conservative Jews alike. The origin of Jewish circumcision is in the Torah. God told Abraham "every male among you shall be circumcised" (Gen. 17) as part of the covenant between God and the Jewish people.
Since that time, virtually all Jews have observed the command of circumcision (Genesis ch.17) for close to four millennia, even in times of religious persecution under the Greeks, Romans, Spaniards, Soviets and others. Circumcision is the indelible sign of God's covenant with Abraham and is just as important as Yom Kippur in terms of the stringency which the Torah places upon it.
While we do not keep God's commands because of physical benefits, it is still interesting to note that:
Circumcision has been known to offer virtually complete protection from penile cancer. According to a recent review article in the New England Journal of Medicine, none of the over 1,600 persons studied with this cancer had been circumcised in infancy. In the words of researchers Cochen and McCurdy, the incidence of penile cancer in the U.S. is "essentially zero" among circumcised men.
Also, research at Johns Hopkins University Medical School in Baltimore have shown that circumcised men are six to eight times less likely to become infected with HIV, the virus that causes AIDS. Researchers believe that protection is due to the removal of the foreskin, which contains cells that have HIV receptors which scientists suspect are the primary entry point for the HIV virus. (Reuters, March 25, 2004)
Several studies reported that circumcised boys were between 10-to-39 times less likely to develop urinary tract infections during infancy than uncircumcised boys. In addition, circumcision protects against bacterial, fungal, and parasitic infections and a variety of other conditions related to hygiene. The extremely low rate of Cervical cancer in Jewish women (9-to-22 times less than among non-Jewish women) is thought to be related to the practice of circumcision.
As a result of studies like these, a number of prestigious medical organizations such as the California Medical Association have recognized the benefits of circumcision.
As an operation, circumcision has an extremely small complication rate. A study in the New England Journal of Medicine (1990) reported a complication rate of 0.19 percent when circumcision is performed by a physician. When performed by a trained mohel, the rate falls to 0.13 percent or about 1 in 800. When a complication occurs, it is usually due to the bleeding, which is easily correctable. No other surgical procedure can boast such figures for complication-free operations.
One reason why there are so few complications involving bleeding may be that the major clotting agents, prothrombin and vitamin K, do not reach peak levels in the blood until the eighth day of life. Prothrombin levels are normal at birth, drop to very low levels in the next few days, and return to normal at the end of the first week. One study showed that by the eighth day, prothrombin levels reach 110 percent of normal. In the words of Dr. Armand J. Quick, author of several works on the control of bleeding, "It hardly seems accidental that the rite of circumcision was postponed until the eighth day by the Mosaic law."
He turns 8. Nothing in Jewish tradition happens when a boy turns eight years old, however when a Jewish is eight days old, he goes through a ritual circumcision called Brit milah.
I think you mean "bris." A Jewish boy gets circumcised when he's 8 days old.
Circumcision and Bar Mitzvah
8 days
It is about a little boy named Mishka who is Jewish It is about the holocaust and how hard it was to be Jewish in those days.
A bar mitzvah is when a Jewish boy becomes a man. This happens at the age of 13.
Jewish boys undergo a "bris" or "brit" (circumcision) when they're 8 days old.
It is usually given at the bris ceremony, when the boy is at least 8 days old (older if there are health concerns).
He wears tefillin and prays at the synagogue. He joins his father, grandfather, and older brothers (if he has any) in ALL Jewish adult responsibilities.
Pavel was the name of the Jewish slave who worked for the commandant of Aushcwitz - Bruno's father.
Both are tragicBoth are set in WWIIBoth have Jewish protagonists
Some of the early Reform Jews did just that - I even saw such an event myself and I thought the boy looked "naked"!