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      Organ transplantation: contemporary Sunni Muslim legal and ethical perspectives.

      Bioethics
      Advance Directives, Aggression, Altruism, Cadaver, Family, Fees and Charges, Human Body, Humans, Informed Consent, Islam, Jurisprudence, Moral Obligations, Organ Transplantation, Religion, Saudi Arabia, Social Responsibility, Theology, Third-Party Consent, Tissue Donors, Tissue and Organ Procurement, Transplantation, Treatment Outcome, Value of Life

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          Abstract

          The problems that organ transplantation poses to the Muslim mind may be summarized as follows: firstly, a Muslim believes that whatever he owns or possesses has been given to him as an amanah (trust) from Allah. Would it not be a breach of trust to give consent for the removal of parts of one's body, while still alive, for transplantation to benefit one's child, sibling or parent? Secondly, the Shari'ah (Islamic Law) emphasizes the sacredness of the human body. Would it not then be an act of aggression against the human body, tantamount to its mutilation, if organs were to be removed after death for the purpose of transplantation? In this paper I attempt to illustrate how the Muslim jurists have tried to resolve the dilemma of Muslims by providing them with certain guidelines based on the original sources of Islam, namely, the Qur'an and the Prophetic tradition. In order to assist the followers of other religious traditions to grasp the gravity of the problem posed by organ transplantation to the Muslim mind, I begin by discussing the opinions of Muslim jurists on the issue of utilization of human parts. Thereafter, I touch upon the resolutions taken by the various Islamic Juridical Academies on the issue in question. Finally, I shed light upon the inclusion of organ donation in a Muslim Will and the enforceable nature of such a will.

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