Dr. Muhammad 'Ali al-Baar
(a member of the Royal College of Surgeons in the UK and a consultant
to the Islamic Medicine department of the King Fahd Centre for Medical
Research in the King Abdul Aziz University in Jeddah) says in his book
al-Khitaan (Circumcision): "Circumcision of newborn boys (i.e., within
the first month of life) brings numerous health benefits, including:
Protection against local
infection in the penis, which may result from the presence of the
foreskin, causing tightening of the foreskin, which may lead to retention
of urine or infections of the glans (tip) of the penis - which require
circumcision in order to treat these problems. In chronic cases, the child
may be exposed to numerous diseases in the future, the most serious of
which is cancer of the penis.
Infections of the urethra.
Many studies have proven that uncircumcised boys are more exposed to infection
of the urethra. In some studies the rate was 39 times more among uncircumcised
boys. In other studies the rate was ten times more. Other studies showed
that 95% of children who suffered from infections of the urethra were
uncircumcised, whereas the rate among circumcised children did not exceed
5%. In children, infection of the urethra is serious in some cases. In
the study by Wisewell on 88 children who suffered infections of the urethra,
in 36 % of them, the same bacteria were found in the blood also. Three
of them contracted meningitis, and two suffered renal failure. Two others
died as a result of the spread of the micro-organisms throughout the body.
Protection against cancer
of the penis: the studies agree that cancer of the penis is almost non-existent
among circumcised men, whereas the rate among uncircumcised men is not
insignificant. In the US the rate of penile cancer among circumcised men
is zero, whilst among uncircumcised men it is 2.2 in every 100,000 of
the uncircumcised population. As most of the inhabitants of the US are
circumcised, the cases of this cancer there are between 750 and 1000 per
year. If the population were not circumcised, the number of cases would
reach 3000. In countries where boys are not circumcised, such as
China, Uganda and Puerto Rico, penile cancer represents between 12-22
% of all cancers found in men; this is a very high percentage.
Sexually transmitted diseases
(STDs). Researchers found that the STDs which are transmitted via
sexual contact (usually because of fornication/adultery and homosexuality)
spread more among those who are not circumcised, especially herpes, soft
chancres, syphilis, candida, gonorrhea and genital warts. There are numerous
modern studies which confirm that circumcision reduces the possibility
of contracting AIDS when compared to their uncircumcised counterparts.
But that does not rule out the possibility of a circumcised man contracting
AIDS as the result of sexual contact with a person who has AIDS. Circumcision
is not a protection against it, and there is no real way of protecting
oneself against the many sexually transmitted diseases apart from avoiding
fornication/adultery, promiscuity, homosexuality and other repugnant practices.
(From this we can see the wisdom of Islamic sharee'ah in forbidding fornication/adultery
and homosexuality).
Protection of wives against
cervical cancer. Researchers have noted that the wives of circumcised
men have less risk of getting cervical cancer than the wives of uncircumcised
men.
Acknowledgments: al-Khitaan,
- Dr. Muhammad al-Baar.
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