San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

No faith in court ruling

- By Daniel Bogard and Tana Senn

The Supreme Court draft opinion overturnin­g Roe v. Wade sent shock waves throughout our country when it was leaked this week. If the ruling stands, abortion access would be decimated in huge swaths of the country, and the rights of Americans everywhere will depend on whether they happen to live in a blue state or in a red state. Beyond being a violation of the human rights of pregnant people, limiting access to abortion is an imposition of government­al Christiani­ty on us all.

And it infringes on the religious liberty of every American Jew.

For Jews, it is no exaggerati­on to say that access to abortion services isn’t just tolerated, it is a religious requiremen­t, and has been for thousands of years.

Surprised? Let’s dig into some of the texts.

In Exodus chapter 21:22 of the Torah, we see a clear statement that a fetus is not a person: “When men fight, and one of them pushes a pregnant woman and a miscarriag­e results, but no other damage ensues, the one responsibl­e shall be fined.” This stands in sharp contrast with the next verse, which makes clear that if the pregnant person themselves is injured, then the punishment is “a life for a life, an eye for an eye.”

The Torah couldn’t be more explicit: A fetus is not the same as a human life.

The Talmud, a central religious text for Jews written over 1,400 years ago, makes this even clearer by stating that “a fetus is considered a part of the pregnant person’s body, equivalent to their thigh.”

Even earlier, we hear in the foundation­al legal text the Mishnah, written 1,800 years ago, that if a pregnant person is set to be executed, that execution should not be delayed unless the person is literally in labor, for the fetus is not an independen­t life until it can breathe on its own.

In a different section of the Mishnah we are told explicitly that if “a person is having trouble giving birth (and their life is in danger) they must abort the fetus, because existing life always comes before potential life. If, however, most of the child has come out already they do not touch it, for we do not push off one life for another.”

Perhaps no idea is more central in classical Jewish legal texts thinking about abortion than that of the “Rodef ” or “the pursuer.” Rodef is a legal category in Judaism for someone or something that is about to kill another human being. Jewish law obligates us to stop a Rodef at any cost — up to and including taking the life of an aggressor. A pregnancy that endangers life is considered a Rodef, and thus it must be terminated.

This is what rabbis mean when we say that “access to abortion is a religious requiremen­t for Jews.” Because there are situations where Judaism doesn’t just allow abortion. In fact, tradition requires abortion when the life of the pregnant person is threatened.

Jewish legal rulings from the last 1,000 years additional­ly makes it clear that are other circumstan­ces beyond a pregnant person’s life being in physical danger that an abortion must be performed. Judaism

also recognizes personal wellbeing, mental health and all sorts of other situations where a person might choose to terminate a pregnancy.

What we — a rabbi and a Washington state legislator — have presented here are Jewish texts showing why access to abortion services are a religious requiremen­t for Jewish Americans. But the beauty of our country is the diversity of background­s and experience­s which we weave together into the tapestry of America. Many Christians interpret these biblical verses differentl­y. Which is fine! American Jews aren’t interested in imposing our faith on our neighbors; we just ask that our neighbors not impose their faith on us.

That is the exact point of the First Amendment — to protect minority religions’ free exercise of religion, including abortion. And that is exactly why this draft Supreme Court opinion, this reversal of abortion access, is so wrong, so un-American, and is a threat to the human dignity and religious liberty of us all.

For Jews, it is no exaggerati­on to say that access to abortion services isn’t just tolerated, it has been a religious requiremen­t for thousands of years.

Daniel Bogard is a rabbi at Central Reform Congregati­on in St. Louis. Tana Senn is a Washington state representa­tive and co-president of the National Associatio­n of Jewish Legislator­s.

 ?? Anna Moneymaker / Getty Images ?? Abortion rights supporters rally Thursday in front of the U.S. Supreme Court in Washington after the leak of a draft memo on Roe v. Wade.
Anna Moneymaker / Getty Images Abortion rights supporters rally Thursday in front of the U.S. Supreme Court in Washington after the leak of a draft memo on Roe v. Wade.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States