TEL AVIV – Egypt’s most famous sex therapist and TV personality said that Jews “have had the highest rate of sexual perversions in history” due to a “psychological imbalance,” MEMRI reported.
On a TV show that was aired on Al Hayat, Heba Kotb, a consultant on Islamic medicine and marital life, claimed that Judaism’s “strict rules,” which she falsely stated include having sex “through a buffer, after sunset, without touching,” create unparalleled sexual perversions among Jewish people. Watch the video here.
Kotb, who was Egypt’s first licensed sexologist and is also the host of popular sex advice call-in show in Egypt, bases her methods on the Qu’ran. She said on Al Hayat TV:
“In Jewish thought, sex has to be for a reason, and the reason could be procreation or the voracious sexual desire of a man, who cannot bear it unless he has sex with his wife. There are very strict rules among the Jews. It has to be done through a buffer, after sunset, without touching, and so on. It’s a whole story in the Jewish faith. But this creates a psychological imbalance, even among the Jews who do that stuff. And therefore they have the highest rate of sexual perversions in history.”
“Dr.” Kotb’s reference to a “buffer” may refer to the infamous myth that Jews have sex through a sheet with a hole in it. The claims that Jews don’t touch and only perform sex after sunset are entirely libelous.
Rabbi Shmuley Boteach, the author of Kosher Sex: A Recipe for Passion and Intimacy, says, “Judaism is the one religion that not only allows sex for pleasure but sees sex as the holiest of all acts because it brings life into the world — and even when it doesn’t, it sews two people together as one flesh, one soul.”
In addition, Jewish law instructs that a man is obligated to satisfy his wife sexually even if she is not able to bear children.
Egypt, on the other hand, still practices female genital mutilation on an endemic level. Last month, Breitbart Jerusalem reported that 90 per cent of Egyptian women and girls were cut, often with the protection of Egypt’s justice system.