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What Jewish law really says about abortion
jta.org ^ | May 22, 2019 | Ephraim Sherman

Posted on 08/05/2019 12:36:20 PM PDT by Morgana

(JTA) – Alabama and Georgia have passed laws recently that limit or forbid abortions in unprecedented ways, joining a growing number of states that are attempting to dramatically restrict abortion access.

During these charged times, it is appropriate for the Jewish community to remind ourselves that halacha (Jewish law) has a nuanced view of abortion.

It seems that many in the Orthodox Jewish community have not been overly worried by these and other efforts to curtail legal abortion. Ben Shapiro, a conservative commentator who identifies as an Orthodox Jew, has long been a loud voice in favor of government-imposed restrictions on abortion. He has cheered the recent state level bans in print, on social media and in his podcasts. He argues that Judaism is in the “pro-life” political camp, as opposed to “pro-choice.”

But in America, the pro-life narrative is largely articulated by the Christian right, and there are important differences between how Judaism and Christianity view the span of time between conception and birth.

Earlier this year, New York state significantly eased its restrictions on abortions after 24 weeks (often called “late term abortion,” which carries ideological baggage and is preferred on the right). This makes it far more feasible for a woman to have a life-saving abortion, or an abortion of a genetically anomalous fetus, later in pregnancy. Importantly, the law does not allow for abortions after 24 weeks without a medical justification. Many of these abortions are fully in line with Jewish law but previously had been more legally questionable.

Both the Rabbinical Council of America and Agudath Israel, large organizations that represent Orthodox Jewish communities, condemned the decision because it allowed for “abortion on demand,” in the RCA’s words, before 24 weeks.

However, both organizations also support, as the RCA explained, “the part of the law that permits abortion, even at a late stage, when the mother’s life is at risk.”

Agudath Israel similarly wrote that it “opposes initiatives that would make abortion unlawful even in situations where termination of pregnancy is mandated by religious law … However, it is not necessary to make all abortions permissible in order to protect the rare instance when abortion is truly indicated.”

“Late term” abortion is not a medical term, but rather the political designation used by abortion opponents for cases where the procedure is done after 24 weeks — the point in pregnancy when a generic fetus is potentially capable of life outside the womb (assuming available high-level neonatology care).

Once the fetus can survive outside the womb, the cases in which abortion are necessary to save the mother’s life drop dramatically. However, in the very rare and terrible scenarios where it is necessary, New York state has made it easier to have these abortion procedures.

The responses by these two Orthodox groups underline at least two significant differences when it comes to abortion between Jewish law, on the one hand, and Catholic law and the hard-line pro-life narrative:

Jewish law does not consider the fetus to be a being with a soul until it is born. It does not have personhood. Furthermore, before 40 days, some poskim, or deciders of Jewish law, have a low bar for allowing an abortion.

The Talmud, in Yevamos 69b, cites the view of Rav Hisda that “until forty days from conception the fetus is merely water. It is not yet considered a living being.”

If there is a threat to a woman’s life, the safety of the mother takes precedence over continuing the pregnancy at any stage. Many sources illustrate this graphically and rather unambiguously, and all modern poskim, or religious decisors, agree on this. In fact, in certain circumstances, a fetus that endangers the life of the mother is legally considered a “murderer” in active pursuit.

For example, in a case of maternal danger, we find in Sanhedrin 72b (further clarified with Rashi’s commentary) that “a midwife may insert her hand into the womb and kill the fetus … [the reason is] for as long as the fetus has not emerged into the world, it is not a nefesh [a being with a soul]; one is therefore allowed to kill it and save the mother …”

According to Mishna Oholos 7:3, “If a woman is having trouble giving birth, they cut up the child in her womb and bring it forth limb by limb, because her life comes before the life of [the child].”

Jewish law prohibits killing in all cases — except if one person is trying to murder another. If an individual is trying to end someone’s life, killing that person is actually a requirement. How much more so, a fetus (not yet a full person) who threatens the mother’s life may be aborted.

In his Mishneh Torah, Maimonides writes the following: “The sages ruled that when complications arise and a pregnant woman cannot give birth, it is permitted to abort the fetus in her womb, whether with a knife or drugs, for the fetus is considered a rodef [a murderer in pursuit] of its mother … If the head of the fetus emerges, it should not be touched, because one life should not be sacrificed for another. Although the mother may die, this is the nature of the world.”

In other words, when a fetus endangers the life of the mother, unless it is in the process of being born, abortion is a halachic requirement.

Rabbi Moshe Feinstein, a revered modern posek with one of the most rigid modern positions on abortion, considers a fetus to have near-personhood status and abortion to be similar to murder in most cases. In his view, there must be clear evidence that the mother’s death is close to certain if an abortion is to be permitted (Igros Moshe, Choshen Mishpat II: 69B). But even Feinstein concurs that if a mother’s life is in danger, abortion is a halachic necessity.

Most other authorities, notably Rabbi Shlomo Zalman Aurbach and Eliezer Waldenberg, who are among the most trusted modern poskim for medical questions, require there to be reasonable risk but err on the side of caution for the mother’s life. These and other poskim recognize that in the words of Rabbi Aharon Meir Goldstein, “Jewish law does not afford a fetus full status as a person.”

As with all of Jewish law, rabbinical scholars wrestle with how to apply these directives in individual cases. Poskim with expertise in this specific area keep abreast of updates in medical diagnostics and technology, and decide on a case-by-case basis which women should be encouraged to have an abortion and which should not be.

But critically, the new restrictive abortion laws do not allow a woman and her rabbi to reach that decision on her own.

In the Georgia law, abortion is strictly banned and criminalized after approximately six weeks. The law includes a provision that seems to allow for abortion in the case of imminent maternal danger.

But it states that before a legal abortion can proceed, a physician must determine “that a medical emergency exists.” Put in clinical terms, this means that a woman would need to be actively in danger at the time abortion began, along the lines of what Feinstein requires.

Another complication: If a woman is diagnosed with cancer during her pregnancy and needs to receive chemotherapy and/or radiation in order to survive, abortion is often needed, and is halachically warranted, prior to these treatments. None of these state level bans seem to allow for this, as the mother is not inherently in a state of medical emergency. Would these states argue that chemotherapy and radiation could be given while she is pregnant, and the fetus may or may not survive this noxious assault? Or perhaps they would argue that these treatments cannot be given, as they might cause a spontaneous abortion? In other cases the law is explicit that intentionally triggering a spontaneous abortion would be grounds for prosecution of the mother and doctor.

There are other nuances in Jewish law that depart from the Christian pro-life narrative:

Jewish law takes psychological and emotional distress into consideration.

The Georgia law specifically states that psychological and emotional distress will not be deemed a danger to the mother, or as a factor contributing to the danger. This view is contrary to the beliefs of many Orthodox poskim.

Waldenberg, considered to be one of the foremost modern scholars of Jewish law in medicine, writes that severe psychological distress is as much of a legitimate reason for an abortion as severe physical distress (Tzitz Eliezer 13:102; 14:101).

He also writes in reference to abortions for fetuses that are physically or genetically ill, and are only likely to have a short and painful life:

“It is clear that in Jewish law an Israelite is not liable to capital punishment for feticide … An Israelite woman was permitted to undergo a therapeutic abortion, even though her life was not at stake … This permissive ruling applies even when there is no direct threat to the life of the mother, but merely a need to save her from great pain, which falls within the rubric of ‘great need.’ Now, is it possible to imagine a case in which there is more need, pain, and distress, than the present one, in which the mother is confronted by the [prospect of a] suffering child whose certain death is only a few years away and nothing can be done to save it?” (Responsa Tzitz Eliezer 13:102)

In Georgia and Alabama, even if a Jewish woman’s obstetrician and psychiatrist encouraged her to terminate a pregnancy due to her psychiatric state or the health status of the fetus, and even if her rabbi told her that Jewish law fully allows her to terminate, she would be forced by law to carry the baby. It would not matter what that means for her safety or the status of the fetus – nor that it violates her religious beliefs.

Strict abortion laws impinge on the religious freedom of observant Jews.

The laws that multiple states are now passing, or attempting to pass, make clear that a physician who participates in an abortion will be vigorously prosecuted. In Georgia, it also criminalizes traveling outside of the state to have an abortion.

Abortions, especially later in pregnancy when many of the dangers that necessitate one become apparent, require expertise and practice to perform safely. It is no exaggeration to say that this law will make even legal abortions for clear maternal physical danger much more difficult to access in these states, as research shows that laws passed to limit abortion correlate with decreases in the number of facilities providing them.

Also, what physician wants to learn how to do a procedure that could land them in prison for decades if a court finds retroactively that the mother was not in enough danger to necessitate it? Or that the danger was not imminent enough?

A reasonable Jewish observer might worry that the loosening of laws that regulate abortion would lead to an increase in abortions for halachically unjustifiable scenarios. A woman who decides that she would rather be pregnant during fall instead of summer, or after a given life event or financial achievement, would not find rabbinic support for such an abortion. Perhaps, the observer wonders, it is better to have strict laws to prevent such abortions.

But as I have expanded upon above, it is nearly impossible to create a law that limits abortion and does not put a secular legal ban on some halachically permissible abortions.

What Jewish community would want to continue to live in a place where they are potentially barred from following halacha? Is a community even allowed by halacha to continue living in such a place, if they have the option of leaving?

It appears to me that the Jewish community cannot justify staying on the sidelines of this national American issue. We need to take the side of allowing for safe, legal, available abortions. Jewish law does not align with the Christian right on this issue, and neither should Orthodox Jews.

Ephraim Sherman DNP, RN, AGPCNP-BC, is a nurse practitioner and healthcare researcher, focused on the intersection of culture and healthcare.


TOPICS: General Discusssion; Judaism; Moral Issues
KEYWORDS: abortion; jewishlaws; jews; prolife
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Again if there are any Jews on this forum who wish to comment have no way of knowing if what this guy says is true. Am not Jewish and do not play a Jewess on TV.
1 posted on 08/05/2019 12:36:20 PM PDT by Morgana
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To: Morgana

Abortion is murder in Judaism, unless the mother’s life is in danger from giving birth.


2 posted on 08/05/2019 12:45:31 PM PDT by montag813
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To: montag813

Thank you. First in to say so.


3 posted on 08/05/2019 12:46:17 PM PDT by Morgana ( Always a bit of truth in dark humor.)
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To: Morgana

I’m not Jewish either, but I would think that modern medicine has made the caveats in the Jewish tradition moot. If the mother’s life is in danger a doctor would do a caesarean delivery, not an abortion. The one point of view we never seem to hear is that of doctors. IIRC, the AMA has said flatly that late term abortion is NEVER necessary. So under what circumstances would they say any abortion is “necessary”?


4 posted on 08/05/2019 12:52:15 PM PDT by Twotone (While one may vote oneself into socialism one has to shoot oneself out of it.)
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To: Morgana

“Thou shalt not murder” is clear enough any child can understand it.

It takes many generations of “wise” Rabbis to rationalize their way from that to this.


5 posted on 08/05/2019 12:56:53 PM PDT by Boogieman
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To: Morgana

bump


6 posted on 08/05/2019 12:59:37 PM PDT by foreverfree
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To: Twotone

Actually Jewish law authorities agree with your observations.

https://jewishprolifefoundation.org/rabbis


7 posted on 08/05/2019 1:02:02 PM PDT by jjotto (Next week, BOOM!, for sure!)
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To: Morgana

From Jeremiah 1:

4 The word of the Lord came to me, saying,

5 “Before I formed you in the womb I knew you,
before you were born I set you apart;
I appointed you as a prophet to the nations.”

Ya don’t get more Jewish than the prophet Jeremiah. I call BS on the article claim that a fetus is not a soul in the eyes of the Jews. If I was a committed abortionist, these two verses would cause me to tremble with fear.


8 posted on 08/05/2019 1:12:43 PM PDT by RatRipper
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To: Morgana
the Jewish community cannot justify staying on the sidelines of this national American issue.

Most Jews could care less about Jewish law and abortion. If they cared about Jewish law, they would oppose LGBT.

9 posted on 08/05/2019 1:23:50 PM PDT by aimhigh (THIS is His commandment . . . . 1 John 3:23)
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To: Morgana
A couple of years ago I had made contact with an Orthodox Jewish scholar, and he assured me that the correct interpretation of Jewish law is that a woman cannot have an abortion unless the unborn child becomes a threat to her physical life.
10 posted on 08/05/2019 1:27:25 PM PDT by DiogenesLamp ("of parents owing allegiance to no oither sovereignty.")
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To: Morgana

This entire argument is moot. Federal law trumps state law in the case of abortion. Doe vs Bolton allows abortion up to the day of delivery if the mother’s health is at risk. Of course, the mother’s health includes physical, mental, social, and economic....so basically for any reason. These state laws restricting abortion are a canard IMO.


11 posted on 08/05/2019 1:49:43 PM PDT by Prince of Space (UNBORN LIVES MATTER!)
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To: Morgana

take it from a Jew... abortion is clearly prohibited and murder under Jewish law.


12 posted on 08/05/2019 2:03:21 PM PDT by Levy78
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To: Twotone

I ask the same question every time this subject comes up: if the child is viable outside the womb, what justification is there to KILL it? There are circumstances where the baby must be delivered to save the mother’s life- pre-eclampsia for one- but delivering the baby solves that problem. Why then do they insist you must kill that child? They use the “saving the life of the mother” excuse all the time but never answer that question.


13 posted on 08/05/2019 2:09:13 PM PDT by luv2ski
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To: Levy78

“Jewish law does not consider the fetus to be a being with a soul until it is born.”

Yet in the Kapparoth prayer, a pregnant woman is to sacrifice a chicken to provide an atonement for her unborn — clearly indicating a belief that the unborn child is a being with a soul.


14 posted on 08/05/2019 2:10:42 PM PDT by CondorFlight
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To: Morgana

Proverbs 6:16-19 There are six things that the Lord hates, seven that are an abomination to him: haughty eyes, a lying tongue, and hands that shed innocent blood, a heart that devises wicked plans, feet that make haste to run to evil, a false witness who breathes out lies, and one who sows discord among brothers.


15 posted on 08/05/2019 2:12:48 PM PDT by xp38
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To: Morgana

You have to consider that there are two types of Jews in New York:

1) The Hasidim. I believe they are pro-life all the way, would need to ask my wife’s aunt to be sure.

2) Self-loathing Jews. Think Woody Allen or Richard Lewis. They make excuses for being Jewish. To them, whatever the DNC says supersedes anything written in the Torah.


16 posted on 08/05/2019 2:17:26 PM PDT by ssaftler (The opinions expressed here have not been peer reviewed, fact checked or focus group tested.)
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To: Morgana

“Jewish” beliefs are not monolithic any more than Christian beliefs are.

Also, it is unfortunate that the majority of religious Jews elevate commentaries above the actual scriptures, because the actual scriptures say that is an unborn baby is harmed in an act of violence, justice is eye for eye, tooth for tooth, and life for life.

Exodus 21:22-25
If men fight, and hurt a woman with child, so that she gives birth prematurely, yet no harm follows, he shall surely be punished accordingly as the woman’s husband imposes on him; and he shall pay as the judges determine. But if any harm follows, then you shall give life for life, eye for eye, tooth for tooth, hand for hand, foot for foot, burn for burn, wound for wound, stripe for stripe.


17 posted on 08/05/2019 2:28:04 PM PDT by unlearner (War is coming.)
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To: Morgana

Very few fetuses are renowned in history for their pre-natal deeds, but as it happens, the first person to rejoice at the news of the coming of the Lord, was a fetus.
And he was Jewish!


18 posted on 08/05/2019 5:00:56 PM PDT by Buttons12
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To: Morgana

First, there is lots of good analysis at the beginning, but in the end, the writer’s conclusions do not follow. The only situation that would justify abortion would be when the birth places the life of the mother at a greater risk than is part of the natural birthing process or via any intervention that is safe and effective to provide the birth of this child, such as C-section.

Jews have no right to impose our halakhic law upon the larger society, and no abortion law that I know of imposes an absolute ban when the life of the mother is in immanent danger.

Recently, many Christians have picked up upon the conceptual ties to the current abortion argument and the cult of Molech. This is the appropriate way of framing the issue. Arguing that children should be aborted because they “could” become criminals is wrong. Or arguing that economic opportunity justifies abortion is essentially the very substance of Molech worship.

The issue with abortion is and will always be the issue of birth control. Birth Control fails at a statistically predictable rate. If you have sex out of marriage, the number of opportunities to become pregnant vs. the failure rate creates an increasing envelop of likelyhood that a pregnancy will result. The push for birth control was to create freedom for women to have sexual relationships out of marriage. This is and has been a losing proposition for women (as a whole) since the idea was put forward but a significant minority of women deeply appreciate this freedom and want to maintain it. This is because people just don’t and won’t agree on these things except in the most general way. Abortion restrictions create consequence that drives the equation of consideration so that society once again favors sex within marriage. #MeToo is all about this same issue..


19 posted on 08/05/2019 5:37:53 PM PDT by dalight
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To: Morgana
Seems like a lot of smoke-blowing to point out that Jewish Law permits abortion when the fetus threatens the life of the mother; the life, not the convenience.

This is based upon the same idea that if someone (called a rodef) comes to kill you, you should rise up and kill him first.

ML/NJ

20 posted on 08/05/2019 5:45:52 PM PDT by ml/nj
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