Beliefnet
  
advertisement

The Islamically Correct Test-Tube Baby

For infertile Muslim couples, in vitro fertilization using their own gametes is OK; surrogacy and sperm donation are not.
By Julia C. Keller



Print Page

Reprinted from the May 2004 issue of Science & Theology News. Used with permission.

Though the President's Council on Bioethics is just beginning to reevaluate infertility techniques in the United States, scientists and clerics in the Middle East have been on top of the issue ever since the first "test-tube" baby was born 25 years ago.

At the annual meeting for the American Association for the Advancement of Science in Seattle, Marcia Inhorn, a medical anthropologist from the University of Michigan, described how, in Middle Eastern countries, religious edicts (fatwas) rule the reproductive lives of Shiite and Sunni Muslim couples who, she said, literally want to make their "test-tube babies in a religiously correct fashion."

In the conference's topical lecture series, Inhorn, also the director of the Center for Middle Eastern and North African Studies, discussed how Islamic religious beliefs strictly outline reproductive dos and don'ts, especially when it comes to in vitro fertilization, or IVF.

Not long after the birth of Louise Brown, the first baby born using IVF technology, the Grand Sheikh of Egypt's Al-Azhar University issued the first fatwa concerning assisted reproductive technology. Inhorn said the fatwa issued in 1980 "has proved to be truly authoritative and enduring in all its main points for most of the Middle Eastern region."

Dr. Gamal Serour, joint founder of Egypt's first IVF clinic that opened in 1986, outlined the importance of infertility techniques in an e-mail. "This technology has been so integral in the Middle East," he wrote. "Procreation and continuity of human life is considered of great importance to the people living in the area."

However, the technology was strictly regulated. Essentially, Inhorn said in an interview, the fatwa stated: "IVF was OK to do as long as you were using gametes from husband and wife and the embryos were transferred back to the same wife."

Anything outside of using sperm or egg from an infertile couple, like surrogacy or sperm donation, said Inhorn is haram, or sinful, and tantamount to zina, or adultery, strictly forbidden in Islam.

"Though it's not the same as adultery per se, it's the same as entering upon the sacred dyad of marriage," Inhorn told Science & Theology News.

Even with embryos created within the boundaries of a marital relationship, restrictions on IVF occur, said Serour, also director of the International Islamic Center for Population Studies and Research at Al-Azhar University. "Cryopreserved gametes or embryos cannot be used if [the] marriage contract has broken, whether by divorce or death of one of the couple," Serour wrote, citing Sunnah, or the normative behavior as proscribed by Muhammad, as the primary Islamic tenet prohibiting this action.

Apart from adultery, IVF creates other problems for Muslims that would seek to use a donor or a surrogate mother.

"Islam privileges the notion of lineage - that each child should have a known father," Inhorn said. "The use of a donor confuses issues of lineage descent and inheritance." In her AAAS lecture, Inhorn said knowing a child's lineage is "not only an ideal in Islam, but a moral imperative."


« Prev Page Next Page »
Page  | 2 

Print Page
Julia C. Keller is acquisitions editor of Science & Theology News.

advertisement
Poll
In vitro fertilization should be:
Allowed
Prohibited
Reviewed

vote       View Results
Talk About It

Related Features

more
Bioethics Group Urges Infertility Scrutiny
March 2004--Bioethics advisers to President Bush urge scrutiny of U.S. infertility industry, including research on the long-term health of test-tube babies.
related links
More from Science & Theology News
In this month's issue:
  • Teens who take abstinence pledge still getting STDs
  • Astronomer claims argument for God's existance is testable
  • Internet church in the works for The Church of England
  • More
  • Faiths & Practices | Inspiration | Health | Entertainment | Comfort & Support | Family & Home
    Relationships | News & Blogs | Audio/Video | Discussions | Ecards | Prayer Circles | Meditations | Quizzes
    Copyright © 2008 Beliefnet, Inc. and/or its licensors. All rights reserved.
    Use of this site is subject to Terms of Service
    and to our Privacy Policy. Constructed by Beliefnet.