Canada: Difference between revisions

Insert better URL
Add new reference
Line 6: Line 6:


Non-therapeutic circumcision of children is not part of the culture of many Canadian minorities. The French-speaking people of Quebec and elsewhere generally do not favour circumcision. Male circumcision is not part of the culture of indigenous Inuit, First Nations, and Métis populations (4.3% of the population).
Non-therapeutic circumcision of children is not part of the culture of many Canadian minorities. The French-speaking people of Quebec and elsewhere generally do not favour circumcision. Male circumcision is not part of the culture of indigenous Inuit, First Nations, and Métis populations (4.3% of the population).
The  medicalized  genital  cutting  of  infants  and  children  was  first  promoted  in  Canada during the mid to late 19th century. Doctors encouraged the genital cutting of both male and  female  children  to  prevent  masturbation  as  well  as  various  diseases  like  epilepsy and  tuberculosis.<ref name="chhrp2018">{{REFdocument
|title=International NGO Council on Genital Autonomy Supplementary Country Report Submission on Canada to the U.N. Committee on the Rights of the Child
|trans-title=
|language=
|url=http://chhrp.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/11/Canada-Supplementary-Report.pdf
|contribution=
|quote=
|trans-quote=
|quote-lang=
|last=Antinuk
|first=Kira
|author-link=Kira Antinuk
|publisher=Children's Health and Human Rights Partnership
|format=PDF
|date=2018
|accessdate=2019-11-16
}}</ref>


Pirie (1927), in a presentation to the Canadian Society for the Study of Diseases of Children, described circumcision as "very common".<ref name="pirie1927">{{REFjournal
Pirie (1927), in a presentation to the Canadian Society for the Study of Diseases of Children, described circumcision as "very common".<ref name="pirie1927">{{REFjournal