Traumatic row over bar mitzvah boy’s circumcision forces Sydney mother to move her son’s simcha from an Orthodox shul to a Progressive temple at 11th hour
Dan Goldberg
The bar mitzvah Australian boy had been scheduled to read from the Torah at Chabad Double Bay last Shabbat, but rabbis from the Sydney Beth Din (SBD) ruled on the previous Monday that his circumcision was not kosher.
Rabbi Moshe Gutnick and Rabbi Yoram Ulman, two judges at the Jewish court, were at the mikvah in Bondi preparing to draw a drop of blood from the boy to symbolize his Orthodox conversion when they noticed that his brit milah, conducted by a Jewish doctor in 1993, was incomplete.
“We immediately called one of the mohelim to check, and he confirmed a further circumcision needed to be done,” Rabbi Gutnick said.
He said he told the boy’s mother, journalist and author Ros Reines, that her son could either be operated on under local or general anesthetic, and that “hundreds of boys” – many from the former Soviet Union – have undergone this procedure in Australia prior to their bar mitzvah.
“In order to become Jewish he has to be (properly) circumcised there’s nothing we can do about it. We feel terrible it’s devastating,” Rabbi Gutnick said.
“I didn’t want my son to have that trauma (of another circumcision),” she told the AJN this week. “It’s not true he wasn’t circumcised; it’s a question of degree.”
'A kid that bounces back'
The single mother, who had an adult bat mitzvah following her Progressive conversion, said she had to inform the 100 or so guests of the change of venue “due to a technical problem” just days before the simcha.
But she said her son sang his portion magnificently. “He’s a kid that bounces back. It was one of the happiest weekends of our lives.”
However, she added: “To know we’ll never be counted there (at Chabad) really hurts me.”
'Fooling the child into believing he is Jewish'
Temple Emanuel Woollahra – which had a double aufruf and a bat mitzvah already scheduled for last Shabbat – accommodated the bar mitzvah.
Rabbi Kamins said it is the first time he has ever heard of such a case.
“We were able to help the family in a way which they (the Orthodox rabbinate) couldn’t,” he said. “I don’t think they would have made that decision with any lightheartedness or lack of consideration.”
But Rabbi Gutnick told the AJN the temple was “fooling the child” into believing he is Jewish.
“Unless the child goes to the mikvah and is circumcised according to Jewish law, pretending the child is Jewish is ultimately doing a disservice to the child,” he said.
In response, Reines said: “I don’t know how they can live with themselves.”
Rabbi Ulman failed to return several calls from the AJN.
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