The Beginning of Life
According to Jewish law, human life begins at birth.
By Fred Rosner
Reprinted with permission from Biomedical Ethics and
Jewish Law, published by KTAV.
Let us first establish the time that a fetus legally
acquires the status equal to an adult human being. The Talmud states in part
that if the “greater part was already born, one may not touch it, for one may
not set aside one person’s life for that of another.” Thus the act of birth
changes the status of the fetus from a nonperson to a person (nefesh).
Killing the newborn after this point is infanticide. Many talmudic sources and
commentators on the Talmud substitute the word “head” for “greater part.”
Others maintain the “greater part” verbatim. Maimonides and Karo also consider
the extrusion of the head to indicate birth. They both further state that by
rabbinic decree, even if only one limb of the fetus was extruded and then
retracted, childbirth is considered to have occurred.
Not only is the precise time of the birth of paramount
importance in adjudicating whether aborting the fetus is permissible to save
the mother’s life, but the viability of the fetus must also be taken into
account. The newborn child is not considered fully viable until it has survived
thirty days following birth, as is stated in the Talmud: “Rabban Simeon ben
Gamliel said: Any human being who lives thirty days is not a nephel [abortus] because it is stated:
‘And those that are to be redeemed of them from a month old shalt thou redeem
(Num. 18:16),’ since prior to thirty days it is not certain that he will
survive.” Further support for the necessity of a thirty‑day postpartum
viability period for adjudicating various Jewish legal matters pertaining to
the newborn comes from Maimonides, who asserts: “Whether one kills an adult or
a day‑old child, a male or a female, he must be put to death if he kills
deliberately…provided that the child is born after a full‑term pregnancy.
But, if it is born before the end of nine months, it is regarded as an abortion
until it has lived for thirty days, and if one kills it during these thirty
days, one is not put to death on its account.”
Thus, although the newborn infant
reaches the status of a person or nefesh, which it didn’t have prior to
birth, it still does not enjoy all the legal rights of an adult until it has
survived for thirty days postpartum. The death penalty is not imposed if one
kills such a child before it has established its viability, but killing it is
certainly prohibited because “one may not set aside one person’s life for that
of another.”
Dr. Fred Rosner is a
professor of medicine at Mount Sinai School of Medicine. A prolific writer, he
has published 36 books and over 800 articles. Dr. Rosner is listed in Who’s
Who in America and Who’s Who in World
Jewry.