Much of the media
noise about the outrageous anti-circumcision decision, recently handed down by
a Cologne court, has focused on its impact on German Jews and Muslims –
naturally enough since those are the groups most immediately and directly
affected.
At a recent
conference on the subject in Berlin, Pinchas Goldschmidt labeled
the ruling a "frontal attack on Jewish life in Europe." And so indeed
it inevitably is. He went on, however, to make the larger point that this is
"part of a trend of mounting intolerance against
religious practices in Europe."
This secularist
hostility has found legal expression in the ideology of individual rights, for
centuries now the long-standing rival of more traditional notions of human
beings as social, communal creatures, who need - and can truly thrive only - in
social and communal relationships. An ideology of individual rights that
rejects such a social and communitarian understanding of human existence posits
purely isolated autonomous individuals. These individuals may, of course, elect
to enter into relationships of various sorts by their own free choice; but they
remain ultimately individuals – their individual autonomy, their freedom from
social and communal bonds being “protected” by the all-powerful liberal State.
For the inevitable corollary of a world which can comprehend only individuals
is the devaluing of all traditional social institutions and communal bonds
(beginning with the family), thus stripping public life of the vast network of
“mediating” structures which have traditionally occupied much of our social
space – the space between the individual and the State.
That
is why the unfortunate controversy created recently in the U.S. by the
Administration’s contraception mandate matters so much. If this particular exercise
in left-wing social engineering succeeds, then religiously motivated
organizations of all sorts - religiously sponsored schools, adoption agencies,
nursing homes, hospitals, psychological counseling centers, immigrant services,
etc., - may eventually find themselves with no morally acceptable alternative
but to shut down. That would definitely deprive many of our most vulnerable
fellow citizens of material services that benefit them – and by extension
benefit the entire society. In doing so it would, of course, also make the
State that much more powerful - but society that much weaker.
So
these issues go beyond such immediate topical flashpoints as contraception or
circumcision. And their long-term effect extends beyond the particular
religious groups immediately impacted. The point is not that the State should
be weak, but that it should not be absolute, and that other entities - natural communities
(e.g., the family) and social relationships and communitarian networks (e.g.,
religious communities) - should flourish.
One
small step towards sanity in this matter would be to practice a consistent
commitment in public policy to what we (and many other nations) all signed on
to, way back in 1948 - in the United Nations Universal Declaration of Human
Rights: “Everyone has the right to
freedom of thought, conscience and religion; this right includes freedom to
change his religion or belief, and freedom, either alone or in community with
others and in public or private, to manifest his religion or belief in
teaching, practice, worship and observance.”
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