metro » Stopped At The Border Mohel/doctor refused entry into Canada to perform a bris. N between Abraham and God.” Singer says he had talked with the family about plans for the bris several months ago as well as a few days prior to the brit milah. While detained at the border, poor cel- lular service prevented him from calling the family. When he asked to make the call or have the officer call the family, the officer refused. At press time, the JN was unable to make contact with the family to see how the issue was resolved. In the 15 years Singer has been a mohel, he has made many one-day trips to Windsor to perform circumcisions. Mohalim such as father-and-son rabbis Avraham and Ezra Cohen of Southfield for decades have also crossed the border to perform the ritual for nearly 40 years with little incident. ext time a Detroit-area mohel is called upon by the Jewish com- munity in Windsor, Ontario, to conduct a ritual circumcision, he may want to consider attaining a work permit from the Canadian Department of Immigration. Or, hire a good international labor lawyer. Without the right credentials, he might get turned around at the border. That was what Dr. Craig Singer of Bloomfield Hills, a board- certified dermatologist, pediatrician and mohel, encountered at the Windsor Tunnel crossing on Thursday, May 19, as he traveled to perform a circumcision for a family BORDER SERVICE RESPONSE Dr. Craig Singer in Windsor. A general statement released by the Unfortunately, once he stated his purpose for vis- Southern Ontario Region of the Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) about the iting Canada, he was further questioned by immigration officials who denied him entry incident read: “Every person seeking entry into Canada into the country because he did not present must demonstrate that they meet the any work permit or Canadian credentials to requirements to enter the country. perform a circumcision in Canada. “Admissibility of all travelers seeking to While there have been the occasional enter Canada is considered on a case-by- delays, clergy on both sides of the border case basis, and based on the specific facts — and as far away as Vancouver, British Columbia — agree this is the first time they presented by the applicant in each case at the time of entry. can recall that an American mohel was “The onus is on the traveler to understand denied entry into Canada. and meet the entry requirements. Canadian immigration officials told “A temporary foreign worker seeking Singer, who received his mohel certification through Hebrew Union College, that the cir- entry to Canada may require a work permit.” The CBSA also pointed to its online cumcision was medically surgical in nature guidelines for Refugees and Citizenship/ and if he ever attempted to perform a bris in Canada again, he would be “reprimanded Canada Temporary Foreign Workers. There, in a paragraph especially deemed for tempo- and possibly prosecuted.” A central rite of identity for Jewish males, rary clergy (R186), the regulations state that a foreigner is permitted to work in Canada the ritual circumcision, barring any seri- without a work permit as clergy defined as ous health concerns, occurs on a baby boy’s a person who is “responsible for assisting a eighth day of life and takes precedence over congregation or group in the achievement any other holiday or occasion in a Jewish of its spiritual goals and whose main duties community, including a funeral, Shabbat or are to preach doctrine, perform functions Yom Kippur. related to gatherings of the congre- “Windsor does not have a mohel gation or group or provide spiritual and, therefore, we rely on our near- counseling.” est town over the river — Detroit Still, the CBSA did not offer a — to bring in a mohel to conduct clear explanation as to why Singer a brit milah,” said Rabbi Sholom was turned away, nor did they Galperin, head of Windsor Chabad explain why the immigration officer for seven years. “Having access to would threaten to prosecute Singer a mohel is essential for any Jewish if he returned to Canada to perform community to be able to bring a baby Jewish boy on the eighth day Rabbi Sholom a bris. Galperin “The immigration officer asked of his life into the covenant made 18 June 9 • 2016 Photo illustration Stacy Gittleman | Contributing Writer Immigration officers on the Canadian side of the Windsor Tunnel stopped Dr. Craig Singer from entering the country to perform a bris for a Windsor family. me if I knew of any Canadian legislation that would permit me to enter the country to perform this ‘surgery,”” Singer said. “I explained this is not surgery, but rather a religious rite, and I told him there are reli- gious freedom laws protecting and enabling Canadian citizens to fulfill their religious beliefs.” While still widely practiced in Canada, views on circumcision — ritual or medical — seem to be shifting out of favor. In 2015, the Canadian Pediatric Society released a statement reaffirming its recom- mendation against the routine circumcision of newborn males but also maintained that families need to make the best decision for their children based on family, religious and cultural beliefs. RELIGIOUS FREEDOM Canadian clergy maintain that Canada holds religious freedom in the highest regard and that this matter, however unfortunate, is more about who is allowed to work in Canada and less about infringement on religious practices. And that all comes down to the whim of the immigration officer on duty. Rabbi Don Pacht, head of school of the Vancouver Hebrew Academy in Vancouver, B.C., who has practiced as a certified mohel in both countries for 17 years, said there is no official governmental certification in either Canada or the U.S. for mohalim. They train either under doctors or rabbis, and their training is not regulated by any government. Finding a mohel in the wider Jewish com- munity in North America is a practice based on references and trust. Pacht speculated Singer’s being a medical doctor is what may have been the determining factor for the immigration officer’s denial of entry. “Canada is very liberal in regard to pro- tecting religious rights, perhaps even more so than the United States,” said Pacht, who holds dual citizenship. “As an American, however, you cannot practice medicine or surgical procedures in Canada without proper documentation; and this immigra- tion official perhaps deemed a circumcision, even though ritual, as surgery.” Singer said he will be hesitant to return to Canada if asked to perform a bris. And if he does, he said he might have to “hire a good labor lawyer” to work through the wording of Canada’s labor laws for foreign clergy. He remained remorseful for the family waiting for him to welcome their baby offi- cially into the Jewish community. “A beautiful lifecycle event was completely soured for this family,” Singer said. “I was wearing a kippah as I went through cus- toms. I could have just said I was visiting a friend in Canada, but with a carrying case containing circumcision surgical equipment in my trunk, I wanted to be completely hon- est.” *