Background: Islam acknowledges that infertility is a significant hardship. Attempts to cure infertility are not only permissible, but also encouraged in Islam. Over the last three decades, a multitude of advances in assisted reproductive technologies (ARTs) have appeared. This review was carried out to inform readers, who are not familiar with Islamic doctrine, about the Sunni perspective on this topic.
Study Design: Systematic review of the literature.
Method: A series of searches was conducted of Medline databases published in English between January 1978 and December 2013 with the following
Keywords: assisted reproduction, infertility, gender selection, ethics, bioethics, and Islam.
Results: In Islamic Sunni law, all ARTs are allowed, provided that the source of the sperm, ovum, and uterus comes from a legally married couple during the span of their marriage. All forms of surrogacy are forbidden. A third-party donor is not allowed, whether he or she is providing sperm, eggs, embryos, or a uterus. Frozen preimplantation may be transferred to the wife in a successive cycle provided the marital bondage is not absolved by death or divorce. Gender selection for medical reasons is permitted. It is allowed for limited social reasons by some jurists, provided it does not involve discrimination against either sex.
Conclusions: ART is acceptable and commendable in Islamic Sunni law provided it is practiced within the husband and wife dyad during the span of their marital contract. No third party should intrude upon the marital function of procreation. Surrogacy is not accepted by Sunni Islamic authorities.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3109/14647273.2014.997810 | DOI Listing |
J Pak Med Assoc
November 2024
Department of Endocrinology, Bharti Hospital, Karnal, India University Center for Research & Development, Chandigarh University, Mohali, India.
Muraqabah is an Islamic form of mindful meditation, prayerful meditation or religious meditation. This is a means of connecting to God, while being mindful of his presence. It also implies seclusion.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNutr Health
April 2024
Research Centre for Healthcare and Communities, Institute of Health and Wellbeing, Coventry, UK.
Religiosity is known to have a socio-cultural influence on food choice. However, to date, research exploring the influence of Islam on food selection has almost exclusively focused on fasting during Ramadan and has not explored the influences of Islam on everyday food choices among Muslim people. This qualitative study explored the influence of Islamic religiosity on everyday food choices among Muslim people.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFArch Sex Behav
May 2024
Singapore Fertility and IVF Consultancy Pvt Ltd., 531A Upper Cross Street, #04-95, Hong Lim Complex, Singapore, 051531, Singapore.
Sociol Health Illn
July 2024
Department of Political Economy, King's College London, London, UK.
The engagement between markets and cultural hegemonies is shaped by the politics that promote or deny the emergence of fresh legitimations in response to the opportunities offered to consumers by new commodities. In the case of Islam and the assisted reproductive technology (ART) market, core cultural values concerning procreation, family and lineage come into direct conflict with the potential consumer demand generated by new ART technologies. Shaped by the character of multiple Islamic modernities and the authority structures of religion and state, it is the Shi'a-Sunni divide which most illuminates the politics of emergence driving the different Islamic responses to those cultural tensions.
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