Yes, they should be proud. If a religion requires that you do something that should otherwise be illegal (like abusing your children), it should face a de facto ban.Simon_Jester wrote:You can say otherwise, that this is merely a ban on circumcision and not on Judaism. And I'm sure you can provide very confident secular explanations for the ban on circumcision goes into place.
But it has the effect of a de facto ban on Judaism all the same. Any parent who wants to be in Germany and be a practicing Jew and be parent of a son at the same time will have to do something the state views as child abuse. To avoid that, they can not have sons, leave Germany, or leave Judaism- those are the choices they will perceive.
Is that okay? Should we call this progress? Should Germans be proud of what this court has done?
To use a more blatant example, think of the Aztec religion. Or, to word it the same way you did:
"You can say otherwise, that this is merely a ban on murder and not on the Aztec religion. And I'm sure you can provide very confident secular explanations for the ban on murder goes into place.
But it has the effect of a de facto ban on the Aztec religion all the same. Any person who wants to be in Germany and be a practicing worshipper of Huitzilopochtli at the same time will have to do something the state views as murder. To avoid that, they can leave Germany, or leave the religion - those are the choices they will perceive."