Religion - Abortion - Partial-Birth Abortion
Abortion is acceptable
under certain halachic guidelines, but what about so-called
partial-birth abortion? The Senate voted last week to ban the
controversial procedure, known medically as "intact dilation and
extraction" and usually performed after 20 weeks of pregnancy, in which
a fetus is pulled partially out of the birth canal, and then aborted.
The method may involve puncturing the head of the fetus and removing the
brain. This is done to allow for an easier vaginal delivery of the
aborted fetus.
The Senate bill did not
garner enough votes to withstand an expected presidential veto, and the
procedure may, therfore, continue to be legal except where specific
states prohibit it.
The Union for
Traditional Judaism, based in Teaneck, NJ recently issued a statement
declaring that it: "opposes abortion as a means of birth control, but
cannot in good conscience, allow abortion to be made the legal
equivalent of murder." The statement, released by Rabbi Ronald D. Price,
Executive Vice President of the U.T.J presents the widely held view of
abortion: "If the mother's life is at risk, abortion is mandated at any
time prior to the actual birth of the head of the infant. Once the fetus
has come into the light of day, its life has the same valence as that of
any other person and must be protected." The statement continues,
"Ironically...to outlaw late term abortions altogether could ultimately
be a violation of Jewish law and thus a violation of religious freedom."
Congress and the Rabbis
The issue of partial
birth abortions has become so controversial that it has resulted in a
bill, proposed by Senator Thomas A. Daschle (D-S.D.), which sought to
ban all late-term abortions. Unexpectedly, given political rhetoric,
many Republican legislators opposed and many Democrats supported that
bill, and it was subsequently defeated in Congress. Those who opposed
the bill felt that it provided no mechanism to ensure that it would
reduce the inappropriate use of partial birth abortions, since it left
complete control of when and how to abort in the hands of physicians.
Another version, the bill put forth by Senator Rick Santorum (R.-Pa),
which was recently passed by the House of Representatives and the
Senate, bans any use of partial birth abortions to terminate a
pregnancy, unless a woman's life is clearly at stake, not simply to
protect her health.
Rabbi Yosef Adler, of
Congregation Rinat Yisrael in Teaneck, NJ, explained the halachic
view: "If a woman's life is in danger, under those circumstances
everyone would agree that it would be permissible to engage in that type
of abortion. If the woman's life was not in danger, here you now have a
major difference amongst various halachic authorities.... The
stringent view, basically that of Rav Moshe Feinstein, is that under no
circumstances other than danger to the welfare of the mother is an
abortion permissible...." Adler also cited Rabbi Eliezer Yehuda
Waldenberg, a prominent halachic authority from Shaarei Zedek Hospital
in Jerusalem, who takes a more lenient stand on abortion. For instance,
in the case of Tay Sachs or other serious genetic defect discovered
during the pregnancy, or if the pregnancy were the result of rape, then
abortion would be allowed. Waldenberg, Adler noted, "is a member of the
beit din [religious high court] in Yerushalayim. There are many
who follow him. He happens to be pretty lenient about how late this
would be permitted as well. Once he establishes the legitimacy of an
abortion, in all probability he would not find much difficulty allowing
it later as well."
But Rabbi J. David
Bleich, author of scores of articles and numerous books on Jewish
medical ethics, indicated that, according to Jewish law, partial birth
abortions should never be an option . He said, "The procedure itself in
virtually all cases...is designed to kill the baby and not to save the
mother. Medically, if there is a problem in that stage of pregnancy and
you want to protect the mother you do a C-section, in which case the
baby can be preserved as well." Of the legislation, Bleich commented,
"Judaism opposes abortion, and to the extent that this limits abortion,
it needs to be supported."
Another expert who has
written and lectured extensively in the field is Rabbi David Feldman of
the Jewish Center of Teaneck, N.J. "The point is that all abortion is
brutalizing and partial birth [abortion] is more so..." said Feldman.
But, he added, "it is clear in Jewish law that if the mother's life or
health are threatened, then the point at which an abortion takes place
does not matter.... The principle is that the mother comes first and we
do everything to save her life." He went on to describe a recent case at
Hackensack Hospital and Medical Center [N.J.], where the decision
regarding an Orthodox woman was particularly complicated. In this
particular case a Caesarean section was not desirable. "A woman who has
eight children had a problem with a hydroencephalic fetus," Feldman
related. "The head was too large for conventional birth, so they
recommended a C-section. But she reasoned that a C-section would be
adverse to the strength of the uterus for the next child. So here we
have not a case of mother vs. child, but child vs. potential future
children. And she said, 'You must puncture the head of that
hydroencephalic fetus, because his life is doomed anyway...and preclude
a C-section for me, which is not dangerous to my life, but is adverse to
the health and the strength of the uterus for future birth'" The woman's
"rabbinic authorities agreed, and so the hospital complied," said
Feldman.
Advances Pose New Problems
Dr. Ronny Meier, a
Bergenfield obstetrician who is also an Orthodox Jew, further explained
the conundrum. "Until a couple of years ago....[fetuses] under 28 weeks
were not viable." He explained that now, with the new technologies
available, it is possible to keep some babies alive even when they are
born much earlier. In fact, according to National Center for Health Care
Statistics, 22-week fetuses have a 14.8 percent chance of survival and
by 24 weeks that rate rises to 41 percent, although many of the "micropreemies"
who survive such early births suffer from moderate to severe
disabilities. According to those figures, medical science is getting so
adept at keeping the smallest premature babies alive, that fetuses
legally aborted at 22 to 24 weeks could have a significant chance of
survival.
The best way to avoid
the problems inherent in later-term abortions, said Meier, is for women
to be aware of their options early on. He recommended that "there should
be more education to prevent pregnancy to begin with. And if somebody
gets pregnant they should go to a doctor right away and discuss ... all
these things very early in the pregnancy, and make a decision very early
in the pregnancy and not wait until they are halfway through."
Dr. Miryam Z.
Wahrman is a Professor of Biology at William Paterson College in Wayne,
New Jersey. She set up and ran the first In Vitro Fertilization
laboratory in New York City.
Source:
JCN, reprinted by permission of the author. A version of this
article was published in the North Jersey Jewish Standard, May
30, 1997.
|
|