Jews fight against Swedish party’s call to ban circumcision

Swedish Jews joined the country’s Muslim community in protesting the call by a major political party to ban all non-medical circumcisions.

The vote in favour of banning male circumcisions for minors was held at the annual conference of the Swedish Centre Party, held in the city of Karlstad.

The party’s commissioners voted 314 to 166 in favour of the ban, overturning previous decisions by the party’s top leadership rejecting support for the measure.

“This means, if the proposal becomes reality, that it will be completely impossible to live as a Jew or a Muslim in Sweden,” warned Swedish Jewish leader Aron Verständig in an interview with the Expressen newspaper.

The vote drew condemnation over the course of the week, including from the party’s own leader Annie Lööf.

Saying she regretted the party conference’s vote, she insisted the Centre Party, which holds 31 out of 349 seats in the Riksdag, the Swedish parliament, was committed to “standing up for minorities in Sweden and their opportunity to live here,” according to Expressen.

“This isn’t something we plan to write a parliamentary motion on,” she added.

The party’s deputy leader, Anders Jonsson, was quoted by The Local as insisting the move was not directed at Jews and Muslims. “This was not a decision that the party leadership wanted,” he said, adding that the debate in the party conference focused on children’s rights, not religious practice.

Nevertheless, Verständig, the Jewish leader who heads the Council of Swedish Jewish Communities – the country’s EJC affiliate – said he was “very surprised and very disappointed” by the decision.

Rabbi Pinchas Goldschmidt, president of the Conference of European Rabbis, echoed the Swedish Jewish leader in his own condemnation of the move.

“The Swedish Centre Party’s decision to promote a ban on religious circumcision is a request for Jews to leave Sweden, the most liberal of EU states. We mourn the lack of tolerance and loss of diversity in today’s Sweden,” he said.

Mohamed Temsamani, president of the United Islamic Associations in Sweden and a former politician, warned such a ban would amount to a narrowing of religious freedom in the country.

Lööf told Swedish media the party leadership would examine the decision before determining its next course of action.

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