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[personal profile] cellio
This afternoon I was reading the dead-tree edition of Moment magazine and came across an excellent article on how anti-abortion laws conflict with halacha. They only seem to have the first few paragraphs on their web site, alas. (They sometimes have full articles. Maybe there's a time lag.)

To summarize, Jewish law does not hold (as much of Christianity appears to) tha life begins at conception; rather, human life begins at birth. (Specifically at crowning, as I recall.) The torah covers causing the death of a fetus; it's a property crime. Killing a person, of course, is not. So abortion is permitted under Jewish law. Not desirable, but permitted.

Now here's where the halachic problem with the agenda of the far right comes in: under Jewish law, there are cases where abortion is mandatory. It is unambiguous that this is required to save the life of the mother; the rabbi generally agree that it is also required to preserve the health of the mother.

Most pro-choice folks (certainly myself included) argue on the grounds of individual liberty, but the author of this article points out that as Jews we should be considering the halachic issue, too. The rest of this entry is me talking, not the author.

If Bush gets his way (through legislation or by stacking the Supreme Court), we could end up in a situation where national law forbids the correct practice of our religion, specifically as regards to how we treat other people. I've been trying to think of an analogy for Christians (staying away from murder because it's emotional), and the closest I can come up with is: suppose the government required you to bear false witness against your neighbor, with the result that he would be criminally or economically ruined. (And if you think that can't happen...) That's a violation of one of the ten commandments. Would you be outraged? Would you heed that law? Requiring the Jewish community to stand by while an actual life is ruined in favor of a fetus is kind of like that. A Jew who does that violates laws (both between man and man, and betweeen man and God) that we take every bit as seriously as Christians take their laws that say life begins at conception. But Christians do not sin if they fail to prevent an abortion; we do in some cases if we fail to perform one.

If religion has no bearing on government, then the anti-abortion lobby has to rework its arguments. If religion does have bearing on government, then all religions must be considered, not just the one most popular with lawmakers. Some of the founders of the country may have been Christian (many were Deists), but this is not a Christian nation. Not then and certainly not now.

(no subject)

Date: 2005-03-07 01:17 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mrpeck.livejournal.com
I admit that I had to look up the term eclampsia as I had heard it called toxemia but this is a case that I know well as my sister went through that just a few years ago. She was put on bed rest but that didn't work and she had to have an emergency c-section 27 weeks into the pregnancy. The chances of my nephew surviving were not good and he was tiny (2lb 2oz). Almost 3 years later he is doing fine but is a little small for his age, has lung damage, and visits the hospital due to, primarily respiratory, illness a few times a year. My sister had similar troubles, but not as severe with her second child but he was only about a month early. I can still remember how I felt during the phone call when my mother was telling me that my sister was rushed into the emergency room. The fear of losing her was very real.

So, my answer, which I believe to be in line with Catholic teaching, would be to do what you can. Do what you can to ensure that the mother can keep the baby, be it bed rest at home or in the hospital as necessary because that is still the child's best chance for survival. If that fails, deliver the baby and do what you can to help it to survive. In that situation if you've done what you can and the baby dies it is extremely unfortunate but you can't be faulted for it.

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