Question: My question concerns
the Islamic stance on abortion. I am aware that the Islamic Shari‘ah does
not allow it. I would like to know whether there are any exceptions in
this regard. Does rape, incest or threat posed to a mother’s life provide
suitable justification for abortion?
Answer: The Holy Qur’an
does not refer to abortion as the term is commonly understood. However
it upholds the sanctity of human life. Murder and infanticide have been
declared heinous crimes. The jurists restrict abortion based on these general
Qur’anic interdictions of unlawfully taking human life. The fact
that the Qur’an describes the development of the human embryo led
the Muslim jurists to differentiate between an unformed biological entity
and the human being. The Holy Qur’an says that the creation of man
starts from sperm which is placed in a safe lodging. This drop is later
formed into a clot of blood, which assumes the shape of a small tissue.
This tissue develops into bones that are covered with flesh and then God
makes it another creation i.e. human being (Qur’an, 23:12-14). The
words ‘then we produced it as another creature’ indicate that the infant
is given a soul some time after conception. Muslim scholars are divided
over the beginning of this last stage in a foetus.
A narrative ascribed to the Holy Prophet
(sws) sets the duration of the first three stages of the foetus namely
drop, clot and tissue, as forty days each. After the completion of this
cycle, God dispatches an angel to breathe the Ruh (i.e. soul) into the
foetus.1 For this reason most
Muslim jurists hold that pregnancy cannot be terminated once the foetus
has been in the womb for 120 days. However the legal schools and individual
scholars differ over the permissibility of abortion before this point.
What follows is a summary of major
viewpoints on the issue:
Classical jurists are divided on the question
whether abortion is allowed in the Islamic Shari‘ah or not. Most
of them believe in its permissibility before the spirit is blown into it.
The exponents of this viewpoint hold that the creation of a living being
is materialized only after this blowing of the spirit. Ibn-i-Wahban
is one of the advocates of this viewpoint. He says that a pregnancy
can be terminated within this period (120 days) on a reasonable excuse
and it will not be considered killing of a living being. The jurists also
differ on whether abortion should be allowed within four months of conceiving.
Some of them forbid it [within 120 days no matter what]. Faqih Ali Ibn
Musa holds that when a sperm enters the womb the foetus is destined for
animation and therefore cannot be terminated.2
Sayyid Sabiq in his work Fiqhu’l-Sunnah
writes:
Abortion is not allowed after four months have
passed since conception because at that time it is akin to taking a life,
an act that entails penalty in this world and in the Hereafter. As regards
the matter of abortion before this period elapses, it is considered allowed
if necessary. However, in the absence of a reasonable excuse it is detestable.
The author of ‘Subul-ul-Maram’ writes: ‘A woman’s treatment for
aborting a pregnancy before the spirit has been blown into it is a matter
upon which scholars differed on account of difference of opinion on the
matter of ‘Azal (i.e. measures to hinder conception). Those who
allow ‘Azal consider abortion as allowable and vice versa.’ The
same ruling should be applicable for women deciding on sterilization. Imam
Ghazzali opines: ‘Induced abortion is a sin after conception’. He
further says: ‘The sin incurred thus can be of degrees. When the sperm
enters the ovaries, mixes with the ovum and acquires potential of life,
its removal would be a sin. Aborting it after it grows into a germ or a
leech would be a graver sin and the graveness of the sin increases very
much if one does so after the stage when the spirit is blown into the fetus
and it acquires human form and faculties.3
The most balanced viewpoint in this regard
is that one should not terminate pregnancy after the foetus grows into
a human being. Obviously the stage is marked by the time when foetus assumes
the human form and receives all human faculties. Medical science however
has not yet been able to determine this stage and unless and until it does
so we can rely on the related Hadith ascribed to the Holy Prophet
(sws) which sets the four month time period. Hence, rape and incest provide
a justifiable basis within the period stipulated above; however, if threat
is posed to a mother’s life, her life shall be saved at all cost.
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