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History of circumcision and which countries / cultures
participate
Circumcision is the removal of some or all of the foreskin (prepuce)
from the penis. The word circumcision comes from the Latin words
circum (meaning "around") and caedere (meaning "to
cut"). Female circumcision is a term applied to a variety of
procedures performed on the female genitalia. Circumcision is
usually performed for religious, cultural, and medical reasons.
Elective adult circumcision may also be chosen as a form of body
modification, or for aesthetic reasons.
The oldest documentary evidence for circumcision comes from Egypt.
This technique was also widely practiced by Semitic peoples, Greeks
and Romans, although it was not considered mandatory and certain
people rejected it.
Judaism and Islam are the leading religions that see circumcision
as mandatory practice for their members today, although Judaism is
attaching a greater importance to this act. Jewish male children are
circumcised eight days after their birth, unless health reasons
force a delay. Islam clerics are less formal about the exact time of
circumcision, although some communities still observe the eighth day
practice of Judaism. One difference between the two religions is
that Jewish male children are circumcised by a religious figure
called "mohel", while some Muslim communities, especially
in Iran, take their children to hospital for circumcision.
The Roman Catholic Church rejected this practice at the Council
of Florence in 1442. However, the members of the Coptic Christian
and Ethiopian Orthodox churches still observe circumcision as
mandatory.
Circumcision is also common in a number of African and Australian
Aboriginal religious traditions, where it is used as a passage rite
for young males. For some West African animist groups, such as the
Dogon and Dowayo, circumcision represents a removal of "feminine"
aspects of the male, while the Nilotic people hold periodical
circumcision ceremonies that are used to group young males in age
sets.
The United States, the Philippines and South Korea are the only
countries that still practice circumcision routinely on a majority
of males for non-religious reasons. Routine circumcision practices
in South Korea are largely the result of American cultural and
military influence following the Korean War.
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