Sheila Kitzinger on Circumcision

Sheila Kitzinger is one of the leading authorities on childbirth outside the US. Her "The New Pregnancy & Childbirth", first published in 1980, has run into four editions. The 2011 edition is unchanged.

''New Pregnancy and Childbirth'', UK edition bookcover

Her condemnation of circumcision is total:

THE FIRST HOURS OF LIFE


THE QUESTION OF
CIRCUMCISION

Circumcision is an unnecessary operation. It can be dangerous, too. It may result in excessive bleeding or infection. Sometimes the penis is damaged irreparably. Some babies have to be rushed to an intensive care unit because of complications. Occasionally a baby dies.

Newborn babies feel pain. In fact, they may feel it more acutely than adults. An adult knows that the pain caused by an operation will end. A baby cannot know this. Amputation of the foreskin, even if it is done with local anaesthetic, is an intensely painful and traumatic procedure. It is true


"WE WERE UNDER PRESSURE FROM
OUR PARENTS TO CIRCUMCISE HIM.
WE DID RESEARCH AND DECIDED THAT
WE COULD NOT DO THIS TO OUR CHILD."


that some babies do not cry during circumcision. They are too deeply shocked to do so. Instead, they withdraw. Whether a baby cries inconsolably or is overwhelmed by shock, he has a raw and painful scar afterwards. He is often so distressed that there are feeding problems, and a woman who longed to breastfeed may be unable to do so. Sometimes a mother observes that her baby's personality seems to have changed. Perhaps it is not only the pain. Trust has been destroyed. The rhythms of love and intimacy between a mother and her newborn have been disrupted.

Although few doctors still defend circumcision as medically necessary, they are often slow to criticize it because they believe that babies cannot feel much, and they are concerned that to challenge circumcision may appear to be anti-Semitic. Men who were circumcised themselves may believe that it never did them any harm. Some parents want a son to be circumcised so that he can be the same as "everyone else" - an argument that is also used to support the practice of female clitoridectomy and infibulation in Egypt and Somalia.

The foreskin protects the tip of the penis. You do not need to retract it or work it loose. Trying to do so may tear delicate structures and hurt the baby. By the time a boy reaches adolescence it will be more flexible.

If you are Jewish or Muslim you may want to welcome your baby into your faith in a ceremony of blessing and thanksgiving that does not entail mutilation. Do not expect grandparents to find this an easy adjustment. You may need to acknowledge the pain that your decision causes them. But ultimately it is a choice that you make.

- p 379

 

The above is taken from the UK edition, published by Dorling Kindersley
Kitzinger, ''New Pregancy & Childbirth'' UK cover

Read reviews and order the US edition, "The Complete Book of Pregnancy and Childbirth", published by Knopf

cover
Amazon.com
It is not confirmed that the two editions have the same content. They have the same number of pages, 448.

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