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Brit shalom (naming ceremony)

Brit shalom, also called alternative brit, brit ben, brit chayim, brit tikkun, or bris in Yiddish and Ashkenazi Hebrew, refers to a range of naming ceremonies for Jewish families that involve rejecting the traditional Jewish rite of circumcision.

History
In 1892, some Reform Jewish rabbis stopped requiring circumcision for converts. In 2002, Dr Mark Reiss opened an online list of rabbis and others who would celebrate Brit Shalom. It was later moved to its own website. In 2021, Bruchim, an organisation of Jews advocating for the acceptance of non-circumcision within Judaism, was founded by Lisa Braver Moss and Rebecca Wald. In 2022, Dr Reiss's list was incorporated into the Bruchim website. ==Ceremony==
Ceremony
There is no universally agreed upon form of Brit Shalom. Some involve the washing of the baby's feet, called Brit rechitzah. Some Brit shalom ceremonies are performed by a rabbi, others by a lay person. ==Popularity==
Popularity
The actual number of brit shalom ceremonies performed per year is unknown. Filmmaker Eli Ungar-Sargon, who is opposed to circumcision, said in 2011, regarding its current popularity, that "calling it a marginal phenomenon would be generous." A survey conducted by the Jewish Journal among mohalim and brit shalom celebrants in the Los Angeles area investigated this claim and found that it is fairly rare. The survey also includes an outlier, Moshe Rothenberg who estimated he's performed 150-200 ceremonies for boys without circumcision. is increasing, however. Even in Israel, more and more parents choose not to circumcise their sons. In 2018, Reform Rabbi Jonathan Romain said to Times of Israel that the concept was of increasing interest, especially for interfaith couples. == Recognition ==
Recognition
Orthodox Jews consider an intended failure to follow this commandment as bringing forth the penalty of kareth, or being "cut off" from the community and from Hashem, as well as being indicative of a conscious decision to cut oneself off from one's people. However, even in the most Orthodox groups, Jewish identity is defined by matrilineal descent; a child born to a Jewish mother is recognized as Jewish, regardless of the status of the genitals. In Reform Judaism, although refusing circumcision is frowned upon, uncircumcised boys are usually accepted for religious training and bar mitzvah if they are sons of a Jewish mother and have been raised with a Jewish identity. Movements that do not see Jewish law as binding, such as Reform Judaism and Humanistic Judaism, may permit it. ==See also==
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