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Judaism

Why every Israeli hospital may one day have its own pig farm

November 17, 2016 12:21
Master of medical ethics: Rabbi Professor Avraham Steinberg

BySimon Rocker, Simon Rocker

3 min read

When the BBC reported earlier this year that American scientists had injected human stem cells into pigs in the hope of growing organs for transplant, some Jews inevitably baulked at the word "pig".

But there is no difficulty in Jewish law. "It is forbidden to eat pig and to cultivate it [for food]," says Rabbi Professor Avraham Steinberg. "But there is no prohibition to derive benefit… for the sake of curing an illness."

Heart valves in pigs are already used in surgery. If the new stem cell technology works one day, then even the strictest Orthodox rabbi would happily take a pig-grown organ if his life depended on it. "One can envision hospitals will have a pig stall and they will sacrifice the pigs every day to save lives," he says.

For years, Rabbi Steinberg has been one of the go-to men in Jewish medical ethics in a field where scientific advances are constantly posing new questions for halachah. Born in 1947, he still works as a paediatric neurologist at Shaare Zedek hospital in Jerusalem and combines his medical expertise with encyclopedic Jewish knowledge.