Cleveland, OH – Female Doc Who Preforms Brit Milah’s

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    Dr. Karen Jaffe places a wine-soaked gauze square on the lips of 8-day-old Charles Carlin during his brit milah ceremony last week.  Photo Credit: Lynn Ischay/The Plain DealerCleveland, OH – Her full-time gig is as an OB-GYN who practices at University Hospitals Suburban Health Center in South Euclid. But when duty calls, Dr. Karen Jaffe becomes a mohelet, or a female mohel, a central figure in one of the most revered traditions in the Jewish religion.

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    The brit milah — or bris, as it is more commonly known — is the ritual circumcision of a newborn Jewish boy, usually performed on the eighth day of life. The procedure, the surgical removal of the foreskin of the penis, is an outward sign of the covenant between God and Jewish people.

    Jaffe is the only female mohel (rhymes with “oil”) in Ohio and one of only a few dozen mohelets in the United States. Traditionally, mohelim were Orthodox men who received special training to perform circumcisions. Often that training was handed down from father to son.

    The need for more mohelim became apparent as the number of American Jews belonging to the religion’s Reform and Conservative movements grew. Two problems existed:

    One was a religious issue. If the father is Jewish but the mother is not, for example — or if the mother is a convert but is not recognized as such by Orthodox Jews — many Orthodox rabbis or cantors choose not to perform the bris.

    The other was the scarcity of people qualified to do a bris.

    “There was a dearth of trained mohelim in America,” said Rabbi Gary Atkins, a Shaker Heights native who now lives in Hartford, Conn., and has been a Conservative rabbi for more than 35 years.

    To address these issues, the new crop of mohelim is primarily made up of physicians.

    “They’re the only ones able to do this because of malpractice and other issues,” said Atkins, himself a certified mohel who was trained by another rabbi.

    In 2003, Atkins and Dr. Neil Pollock, a certified mohel and physician in Vancouver, British Columbia, launched their own program, which provides instruction to doctors in both surgical technique and religious training. Two other programs in the United States account for nearly 400 new mohelim in the past 15 years. Female mohelets make up roughly 10 percent of that number.

    Jaffe, an OB-GYN in the Cleveland area for more than 20 years, said she longed to fill a need here, where the only other mohel is Orthodox.

    “At some point it became clear to me that I had another service that I had to offer,” she said. “I feel that’s really my role. It is a lovely ceremony, and people feel very strongly about it.”

    Circumcision wasn’t new to Jaffe, who like many OB-GYNs (as well as urologists and some pediatricians and family practice physicians) performs them regularly in the hospital — on babies of all faiths — often right before mother and baby are discharged.

    According to data from the National Hospital Discharge Survey, 77.9 percent of newborn boys born in the North Central region (which includes Ohio) were circumcised in 2006, down from 80.1 percent in 1994. An estimated 90 percent of babies born at UH are circumcised at the hospital. For her religious training, Jaffe turned to the Berit Mila Program, which trains Jewish physicians and certified nurse midwives with the appropriate surgical backgrounds who also are in good standing with a synagogue. Jaffe completed a four-day intensive course in May 2007 in Chicago and performed her first bris a few months later.

    “I found over and over people who really wanted their son circumcised and would like to have a Jewish ceremony that didn’t fall under the auspices of the Orthodox mohel,” she said.

    When she first became a mohelet, Jaffe met with Reform and Conservative rabbis in the community to let them know about her services. In her first full year, Jaffe performed 20 brit milahs. Jaffe has performed twice that amount already this year, the most recent one on Sept. 8.

    The first part of the ceremony focuses on Jewish prayers, followed by the bris.
    Lynn Ischay/The Plain DealerMelissa and Jacob Carlin hold their 8-day-old son, who was named Charles Wallace and given the Hebrew name Enoch during his brit milah ceremony last week. Dr. Karen Jaffe, right, performed the ceremony.

    How much of the procedure parents and others actually watch is up to them. Most people don’t see their babies being circumcised in the hospital, so it’s not uncommon for people to skip that moment of the ceremony.

    Following the procedure (which only takes a few minutes), the ceremony focuses on giving the baby his Jewish name and stories about the person he is named for. Jaffe stays for about 30 minutes after the ceremony to make sure there isn’t any unexpected bleeding from the procedure.

    In recent weeks, the national discussion about circumcision has heightened. Opponents call it an unethical practice when done without the consent of the patient, such as an infant. Proponents point to studies that have shown that uncircumcised men were more likely than circumcised men to be infected with HIV and the human papilloma virus, or HPV.

    The official stance of the American Academy of Pediatrics is that circumcision has no proven medical benefit.

    Even though parents approach a bris as part of their religious observance and not as a health precaution, that doesn’t mean that they don’t have questions, Jaffe said.

    “They still have a modern approach,” she said, adding that the fact that she is a physician reassures parents who are nervous about circumcision.

    “They want to know the risk,” she said. “They want to know how it’s going to be done [and] what can be done to make the baby more comfortable.”


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    52 Comments
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    what
    what
    14 years ago

    What next? You know this could be a good thing. Let them separate themselves even more. First it was “father is a Jew that’s enough”. Then converts by Reform Rabbi’s (who themselves may ONLY be Jewish by their father) converting non-Jews into Jews (sic) and now this. They are/will become a new religion and soon will not be part of Judaism. EY”H

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    14 years ago

    Mazel Tov

    OMG
    OMG
    14 years ago

    And Babishka you claim that the math will propel Orthodoxy over Reform and Conservative well it seems you are wrong they are expending and doing the right thing, it is about time that we have woman perform important Jewish functions, they are definitely capable as men.

    webmom
    webmom
    14 years ago

    think of Tzipporah, moshe’s wife….she gave a bris to her son too…..

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    14 years ago

    What a tragedy. A bris performed by one who is not Shomer Shabbos is not valid. These children will miss out on a mitzvah that is such a vital part of Yiddishkeit. There is a terrific mohel in Cleveland named Rabbi Koval who performed many brissim for non-orthodox and dealt with them with great sensitivity. This is a big shame.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    14 years ago

    Clueless. Nebach.

    just asking
    just asking
    14 years ago

    what is the halacha if a bris was done by a reform mohel? do you need to do it over? (Draw blood?)

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    14 years ago

    There is nothing inherently wrong with a female mohel (though its not the minhag) so if she was a shomer shabbos the bris would be kosher. but the other commenters are right, most frum mohalim will do a bris even if the boy isn’t halachically jewish-they do it l’shem gerus and hopefully the boy will be megayer layer.

    tzoorba
    tzoorba
    14 years ago

    Women can’t perform a bris according to halacha. The gemora discusses the case of Tzipora and indicates that she didn’t do the bris.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    14 years ago

    It has got to be better than the alternative which is hospital circumcision. If the child becomes a BT he will have to decide what to do then, he will have to do a whole conversion if the mother is not Jewish. Hatafas dam is easier than a complete bris.

    מהפך פשטא
    מהפך פשטא
    14 years ago

    There are differences of opinion if a woman could be a “Mohel”
    שולחן ערוך יורה דעה הלכות מילה סימן רסד
    וי”א דאשה לא תמול) (סמ”ק והגהות מרדכי),

    Shla-Mazel Tov
    Shla-Mazel Tov
    14 years ago

    The bris itself isn’t possul as long as it is performed on a Jewish boy, even if performed by a non-Jewish physician (G-d forbid). By the Sephardim, as long as the foreskin removal was complete, nothing more is needed. Ashkenazim are strict and tend to require hatafas dam by a kosher mohel at a later time, a reportedly painless procedure wherein a mohel makes a tiny ‘prick’ on the original area, comparable to a blood glucose test.

    bp shomrim
    bp shomrim
    14 years ago

    Just a reminder that about 70 years ago a man named Hitler did not care if you were orthodox, conservative or reform. He did not even care if you were a man, woman or a child. He just killed you, because you all had something in common….YOU WERE A JEW.

    Abe
    Abe
    14 years ago

    To Robert Says:
    i have to see this one!
    show me a source
    i find it inconceivable that tzipora did not do the brit since the torah says that she did

    It is quiet possible that since Tzipporah is the one that realized that her son needed a Bris, even though she didn’t actually do the bris (i.e. she appointed a shliach), the Torah credits the mitzvah to her as if she actually did it. By the way even if she told Moshe to do the bris, the torah would have credited the mitzvah to her. And in her zechus Moshe was saved. Amazing!!

    Big Man
    Big Man
    14 years ago

    Karen Jaffe is a conservative convert. Therefore, she is not a Jew. According to the Rama, any child who had a bris from her, needs hatafas dam bris.

    Chacham Mah Nishtanah
    Chacham Mah Nishtanah
    14 years ago

    Sorry for my previous misquote. According to Maimonidies a female can be a mohel. According to the Rema”h she cannot.
    But if she is considered a Mumar, then she cannot according to everyone (plus the wine she put into the baby’s mouth would be forbidden…), but probably she is more ignorant in Torah rather than a Mumar..

    Dikduk Man
    Dikduk Man
    14 years ago

    Anonynous #1 - the plural term for “brit” (sorry, ‘bris’) is ‘briTOT’, not ‘brittim’ (‘brissim’).

    Just saying. Proper grammar.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    14 years ago

    There is something a little weird about a woman performing circumcisions.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    14 years ago

    well, at least they’ll only need a hatofos dam to to correct it

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    14 years ago

    Acoording to someone who holds that a woman can’t be a mohel (someone mentioned the Remah above), would it be good after the fact?

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    14 years ago

    Judaism today is like TMZ gossip girls. Every sect, every rabbi, every person has their own traditions and opinions. And everyone feels that they have the truth of the matter and everyone else doesn’t know what they’re talking about.
    I’m sure there were and are Rabonim with opinions that would say that it is against the Torah for women to be doctors, but today it is mostly allowed too.

    Nachman
    Nachman
    14 years ago

    On a more intelligent note; Judaism is not about preference or comfort. HALACHA RULES!
    Those who seek to ‘go with the times’ so to speak are weak by nature. Maybe they ought to try another religion… Genuine Judaism requires devotion on a very high standard.
    I also speculate that to blame in part for this trend of ‘alternatives’ is Tendler and company who gave Orthodox Mohalim some bad advertisement…
    Last but not least is a question I must raise: Why is VIN reporting what other ‘religions’ (by now probably gentiles practicing something resembling the Jewish religion = reform) are practicing?

    I sign off by wishing ALL ERLICHE YIDDEN a Kesiva Vachasima Tova!

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    13 years ago

    Dr. Karen Jaffe is quite an expert in this service. Her briss is very beautiful and she is very skillful with the procedure. The boys that have had her for their briss are quite lucky indeed. She seems to connect with the mother and make her feel involved. Women should be more involved with the briss,they seem to care more about the boys not feeling any pain.