ABORTION IN ISLAM
Humans are the most favoured
creation of the Creator, Allah (swt): "And indeed We have honoured the
children of Adam, carried them on land and sea, gave them lawful, pure
provisions, and greatly preferred them above many of those We have created."
(Al-Isra,17:70)
Among these signs of Allah’s
favour on the children of Adam, is the sacred value Allah (swt) assigns to the
life of a human being. When that value was violated with the first unlawful
murder of a human being on earth, when one of Adam’s sons killed his own
brother out of malice, Allah (swt) condemned that act and put it on record in
the Quran as a reminder, to be recited until the Day of Judgement.
Allah (swt) went even further,
making unlawful killing of a single individual human being equal to mass murder
of the whole of mankind: "Because of that, We ordained for the children
of Israel that if anyone killed a person not in retaliation for murder or for
spreading mischief on earth, it would be as if he killed all mankind. And who
saved a life, it would be as if he saved all mankind." (Al-Maidah,5:32)
Some Muslims argue that abortion is
permissible if the foetus is younger than four months (120 days). They quote a
statement from the Prophet (s) that refers to a human being starting as a
fertilised ovum in the uterus of the mother for forty days, then it grows into a
clot for the same period, then into a morsel of flesh for the same period, then
an angel is sent to that foetus to blow the Ruh into it and to write down
its age, deeds, sustenance, and whether it is destined to be happy or sad.
Assuming the hadith to be
authentic, scholars explain that the error comes from understanding that before
the Ruh is blown into the foetus at 120 days, the foetus is not a living
entity, and therefore aborting it does not amount to killing it. This
understanding is wrong, scholars argue, because the foetus is a living entity
right from the moment of fertilisation and implantation on the wall of the
uterus.
Scholars explain that the Ruh
mentioned in this hadith of the Prophet (s) is something other than being
alive and only Allah (swt) knows what it is, based on the verse in the Quran:
"And they ask you about the Ruh. The Ruh is one of the things the
knowledge of which is only with my Lord, and you, mankind, have been given only
little knowledge." (Al-Isra,17:85)
It therefore becomes clear that
aborting a foetus before 120 days is still killing a living entity, let alone
abortion after that presumed period.
The only case when aborting a
foetus, before or after 120 days, is allowed in Islam, is when a medical
situation threatens the life of the mother, leaving only two options, to let
either the other or the foetus survive, but not both. Scholars argue that such a
case can only be determined by a specialist, trusted and committed Muslim
doctor. They argue that the mother can have other children, whereas the child
cannot make up for losing the mother. A fatwa (legal ruling) to that
effect was issued by the late Dr Mahmoud Shaltut, Shaikhul Azhar (Al-Fatawa,
p164).
Imam Al-Ghazali discussed this
issue in his famous book, Ihya Ulumuddin. Briefly, he asserted that once the
semen from a man fertilised an ovum from a woman, and went into the womb of the
mother, it was indeed a living entity and should not be intentionally aborted.
As the foetus progressively develops in the womb, intentional abortion becomes
an even worse sin amounting to killing a living entity. In some schools of
Islamic thought, causing a foetus to be accidentally aborted, say by beating a
pregnant mother, results in payment of the blood money penalty equal to
one-tenth of that paid for mistakenly killing a mature human being.
Living in Australia, Muslims are
exposed to all kinds of false arguments, including media reports in all forms
and shapes, about a female having full authority on what to do with her body,
including becoming pregnant through adultery and /or aborting an undesirable
pregnancy. In Islam, freedom is not absolute. It is qualified by conditions set
by Allah (swt) and His Messenger (s). Being aware of Islam becomes even more of
an obligation to a Muslim living in Australia.
It helps to remember what our
beloved Prophet, Rasulullah (s), did when a woman came to him confessing that
she was pregnant from adultery, although she was married. Her remorse and
atonement for the sin was stronger than the fear from the penalty of being
stoned to death.
Rasulullah (s) first tried to
verify that she was indeed confessing to the sin, and after she insisted, he
sent her back to wait until she gave birth to the child. With true intention of
being purified and punished in this world rather than in the Hereafter, she
returned carrying a newborn child. Again, Rasulullah (s) sent her back to look
after the child until the child was weaned. She later returned with the child
eating a piece of bread in his hand.
Salem Alamry <salamry@hotmail.com>