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What's more, we're not just supporters of the right of [[genital autonomy]] but believe that we have a moral obligation to defend that right on behalf of those who can't defend it themselves. As we see it, the moral obligation to actively oppose genital cutting is intrinsic to our self-concept of who we are as Jews. This obligation comes from the principle of tikkun olam, which is typically translated as "repairing the world." Although tikkun olam is originally a religious concept, it is also deeply ingrained in secular Jewish thought, philosophy, ethics and culture. It is a moral imperative that impels followers of Judaism and secular Jews, alike, to strive to leave the world better than we found it. That is why the [[Brit Milah]] is increasingly being replaced by the [[Brit Shalom]] among religious Jews. It is why so many secular Jews are actively working to end all forced genital cutting. Jews Against Circumcision is against all forced genital cutting not in spite of our being Jewish but because we are Jewish.
As many of you know, the [[Worldwide Day of Genital Autonomy]] commemorates the 2012 [[Cologne circumcision court judgment|Cologne court ruling]] that recognized that forced circumcision constitutes a grievous bodily harm to the child who is subjected to it. The notion that [[genital autonomy]] is a universal right is reflected in the fact that this commemoration is observed all over the world by those who value [[human rights ]] and human dignity above all else. It reflects the powerful idea that every child - no matter where that child is born, no matter who that child's parents are, no matter who or what that child's parents worship or pray to, no matter what tribe, ethno-linguistic group, clan, ethnicity, race, people, religion or nationality that child is born into - that child is first and foremost a human being: a member of the human race. The fundamental rights that we recognize as [[human rights ]] aren't adjuncts to being human but intrinsic to being human. They aren't severable and they aren't conditional. They don't belong to some but not to others. They don't belong to infants and children of one sex but not to infants and children of another or indeterminate sex. They belong to every infant, every child, every human being the world over.
Unfortunately, as history all too often demonstrates, the existence of a right is no guarantee that that right will be respected. At this moment, hundreds of millions of girls and women and a billion boys and men around the world are living with the scars and the damage of forced genital cutting. Who knows how many intersex individuals around the world are living with the trauma of having had binary sexual-assignment-surgery imposed on them without any need for it and without their wanting it. That is why the Worldwide Day of Genital Autonomy exists. Not to encourage parents, religious leaders, medical professionals and legislatures to grant the right of [[genital autonomy]] to every child - for how can one grant to children a right they're born with? Rather, it's to demand respect for the right of [[genital autonomy]] that, by virtue of being human, every child already has.
Here, again, in the worldwide campaign for [[genital autonomy]], we see the same impulse as that of tikkun olam - "repairing the world." This impulse, of course, isn't unique to Jews. It motivates people of all cultures and religions and, of course, free-thinkers who recognize that freedom, dignity and self-determination are universal values and who feel themselves called to fight for universal [[human rights]]. The right of bodily self-ownership and [[genital autonomy]] lies at the very heart of the ongoing struggle for basic [[human rights ]] the world over.
The worldwide effort to secure the right of [[genital autonomy]] for every male, female and intersex individual, no matter how old or how young, is what the Worldwide Day of Genital Autonomy is all about. That is why [[Jews Against Circumcision]] is proud to join our brothers, sisters and non-binary siblings of all faiths, all ethnicities and all nationalities in participating in this international event. And that is why we encourage you, on this day - and every day - to defend that most basic and essential human right: the right of [[genital autonomy]].