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Published in: Journal of Religion and Health 5/2019

01-10-2019 | Brain Death | Philosophical Exploration

Go in Peace: Brain Death, Reasonable Accommodation and Jewish Mourning Rituals

Authors: Ezra Gabbay, Joseph J. Fins

Published in: Journal of Religion and Health | Issue 5/2019

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Abstract

Religious objections to brain death are common among Orthodox Jews. These objections often lead to conflicts between families of patients who are diagnosed with brain death, and physicians and hospitals. Israel, New York and New Jersey (among other jurisdictions) include accommodation clauses in their regulations or laws regarding the determination of death by brain-death criteria. The purpose of these clauses is to allow families an opportunity to oppose or even veto (in the case of Israel and New Jersey) determinations of brain death. In New York, the extent and duration of this accommodation period are generally left to the discretion of individual institutions. Jewish tradition has embraced cultural and psychological mechanisms to help families cope with death and loss through a structured process that includes quick separation from the physical body of the dead and a gradual transition through phases of mourning (Aninut,Kriah, timely burial, Shiva, Shloshim, first year of mourning). This process is meant to help achieve closure, acceptance, support for the bereaved, commemoration, faith in the afterlife and affirmation of life for the survivors. We argue that the open-ended period of contention of brain death under the reasonable accommodation laws may undermine the deep psychological wisdom that informs the Jewish tradition. By promoting dispute and conflict, the process of inevitable separation and acceptance is delayed and the comforting rituals of mourning are deferred at the expense of the bereft family. Solutions to this problem may include separating discussions of organ donation from those concerning the diagnosis of brain death per se, allowing a period of no escalation of life-sustaining interventions rather than unilateral withdrawal of mechanical ventilation, engagement of rabbinical leaders in individual cases and policy formulations that prioritize emotional support for families.
Footnotes
1
The only reference in the original Beecher committee’s report is to a sermon by Pope Pius the 12th. No data from animal or human studies were cited.
 
2
Babylonian Talmud, Tractate Yoma 85a.
 
3
Decapitation is accepted by certain rabbis as indisputable evidence of death.
 
4
Many ultra-Orthodox Jews in Israel view the official, State-run rabbinate, which is part of a secular political and Civil-Service system, with some reservation. Its rulings are generally thought to carry less weight than those of independent “poskim” rabbis and heads of Yeshivas whose authority is based on personal reputation based on a lifetime of Torah study, such as rabbis Elyashiv, Auerbach and Feinstein mentioned above (Friedman 2015).
 
5
The name of the law emphasized the apnea component of brain-death determination, in an effort to appeal to rabbinic leaders. This is because apnea is an important part of Halachic determination of death, regardless of whether brain-death criteria are accepted or whether only cardiac arrest and apnea are used to determine death.
 
6
(Babylonian Talmud, tractate Ketubot 104a).
 
7
Rabbi Moshe Feinstein, for example, in his commentary on Numbers 35, 33 holds that secular prohibitions against bloodshed are driven by practical concerns about maintaining social order (Yishuv-ha-Olam) and are therefore contingent on circumstances, as opposed to the Torah’s reasoning for prohibiting murder that is absolute and based on the inherent value of human life. He incidentally notes in the original Hebrew version of the same passage, that “it is well known that doctors do not try very hard on behalf of an elderly patient.” (Dorosh Moshe, Parashat Masei).
 
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Metadata
Title
Go in Peace: Brain Death, Reasonable Accommodation and Jewish Mourning Rituals
Authors
Ezra Gabbay
Joseph J. Fins
Publication date
01-10-2019
Publisher
Springer US
Keyword
Brain Death
Published in
Journal of Religion and Health / Issue 5/2019
Print ISSN: 0022-4197
Electronic ISSN: 1573-6571
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10943-019-00874-y

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