Q&A: Bringing a Child into the World from the Sperm of a Fallen IDF Soldier
Bringing a Child into the World from the Sperm of a Fallen IDF Soldier
Question
Hello Rabbi,
Recently an article was published on the matter in which the court ruled that the fallen soldier’s mother is not entitled to bring a child into the world from her son’s sperm. I wanted to ask you how, in your opinion, one should decide an issue like this, and what considerations stand behind such a ruling.
Best regards,
Answer
It is indeed a difficult question. I do not know all the details, nor have I read the reasoning of the court’s ruling. Therefore I cannot say anything fully formed here, but I will write a few very brief remarks and some lines for discussion as an initial reflection.
First, it seems to me that the discussion should be divided into the moral and the legal. The question of what is morally right and the question of what the law says are different questions. Presumably the court dealt with the second and not the first. Still, if the law allows several possibilities, there is room to let the court make the decision on moral grounds. I do not know whether, when the conclusion is that the law has nothing to say on the matter, a moral dispute can be resolved at all. Might-makes-right? In whose possession is the sperm?
As for the question itself, one should distinguish between the question of rights over a person’s sperm and the question whether there is any barrier to making use of it.
A. The question of rights: Does it pass to his heirs? Is there ownership here? Of what kind? To whom? Does the deceased owner of the sperm have rights to determine what will be done with it? [In parentheses: is ownership of sperm ownership of the information embedded in it, or of the physical sperm itself? What would happen if someone duplicated the information in the sperm cells and created an identical but different cell, with the same information? Regarding ownership of information, see my article in Techumin 25, and also here on the site about copyright and intellectual property.]
B. Is there any barrier: even if nobody has rights, the sperm is still presumably ownerless, and perhaps anyone who takes possession of it may use it, and nobody can prevent him from doing so.
And beyond all this there is the question of the child’s welfare. Will a child born this way suffer, such that it would be better for him not to have been born? Is such a consideration legitimate at all, and who is supposed to make it (the court, the grandparents, the mother)? It seems to me that this is connected to the question of wrongful life, since one may ask whether the child who is born will be able to sue his grandparents and biological mother for having brought him into the world. See also in my article here.