Keywords
Body Parts and FluidsCadavers
Death
Determination of Death
Donors
Ethics
Fetal Tissue Donation
Fiqh
Islamic Ethics
Living Donors
Organ Donation
Remuneration
Sharia
Tissue Donation
Religious Ethics
Donation / Procurement of Organs and Tissues
Full record
Show full item recordOnline Access
http://hdl.handle.net/10822/823534Date
2016-01-08Identifier
oai:repository.library.georgetown.edu:10822/823534Jeddah, Saudi Arabia: Islamic Fiqh Council 1988 February 6-11: 4 p. [Online]. Accessed: http://www.islam-qa.com/en/ref/islamqa/107690/print [2009 October 20]
http://hdl.handle.net/10822/823534
Collections
Related items
Showing items related by title, author, creator and subject.
-
Fatwa 27: Ruling on Transferring Human Organs to Be Transplanted in Somebody ElseEuropean Council for Fatwa and Research, 2016-01-08
-
Appendix H: Some Resolutions of Al-Majami' Al-Fiqhia and FatwaYacoub, Ahmed Abdel Aziz (2016-01-08)
-
Zira'at Khalaya Al-Jihaz Al-'Asabi Wa Khassatan Al-MukhkhSalami, Muhammad al-Mukhtar (2016-01-08)Is it allowed in Islam to transplant the cells of the nervous system? This is the main question of this paper which was read during the symposium held by the Islamic Organization for Medical Sciences (IOMS) during the period 23-24 October 1989 on organ transplantation. The author says that the answer for the aforementioned question is dependent on a number of factors each of which can make transplanting such organs permitted or prohibited. These factors have to do with the identity of the organ donor and receptor and the purposes for which these organs are to be transplanted.