An article clearly biased against the Jewish rite of circumcision published in the Forward on Monday (Circumcision Rates Are Slipping — Even In Israel), willfully misrepresents the obvious adherence of the vast majority of Israeli parents—secular and religious alike—to this tradition.

“In the United States, activists […] have been working for at least 30 years to lower circumcision rates and raise consciousness about the ritual,” writes former NPR News correspondent in Jerusalem Linda Gradstein, concluding victoriously: “Now even Jews in the Jewish state are starting to share such sentiments.”

Of course, throughout history, there have been Jews who refused to circumcise their sons, and Israel over the past century and a half has seen its share of socialists, nihilists, converts to other religions and just oddballs who opted to leave their offspring without the mark of the covenant with God. That’s nothing new. Gradstein’s mission, apparently, is to prove a growing trend of Israelis who are moving away from the Brit Milah.

So, to make her case, Gradstein interviews a kibbutznik, Rani Kasher, who did not circumcise three of his sons; an anti-religious coercion activist named Ronit Tamir who claims to be running two Facebook groups, each with 1,000 followers; Prof. Sergio Della Pergola, a demographer who ties the supposed anti-circumcision trend in Israel to the green movement; and Eyal Raviv, who runs and operates MEPEACE, a network for peace in the Middle East.

At the very end, Gradstein balances her three vehement anti-circumcision voices with that of Dr. Guy Hidas, head of pediatric urology at the Hadassah Medical Organization in Jerusalem, who supports circumcision for both traditional and medical reasons.

If that were Gradstein’s entire piece, it would have been interesting, although a good editor would have recommended changing the grandiose headline about slipping circumcision rates, because a serious magazine like The Forward would want to back this statement up with real numbers.

Ergo the misleading paragraph Gradstein plants early on, which states: “While exact statistics are not available, it seems clear that the decision to forgo circumcision is becoming more acceptable, at least in secular Israeli circles.”

No it doesn’t.

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