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It's time to legalise assisted dying, in the name of compassion

In my work as a congregational rabbi I see people die in pain, needlessly

June 30, 2023 14:28
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'Dignity in Dying' supporters gather to call for a change in the law to support assisted dying outside the Houses of Parliament in central London on October 22, 2021. - Members of the UK parliament's upper house were to debate proposed legislation to allow terminally ill people assistance to end their own lives. (Photo by Tolga Akmen / AFP) (Photo by TOLGA AKMEN/AFP via Getty Images)
3 min read

As someone who passionately values the gift of life that we each have, why have I now become head of the campaign in Britain to legalise assisted dying, whereby a person obtains a prescription for life-ending medicine that they themselves take?

It is precisely because of my work as a congregational rabbi and many years of visiting hospitals and hospices, where I see people die in pain, despite the best efforts of medical staff.

They often beg doctors and relatives “Can’t you help me die in peace?”, but at present that is not legal. I see no merit in individuals being forced to live out their last days in misery if they want to avoid it.

In Ecclesiastes we are told that ‘There is a time to be born and a time to die’ (3.2). It is noticeable that it does not stipulate who chooses that moment.

Suicide is rightly discouraged in Judaism, but that assumes the person may otherwise live on for many years if not decades. Assisted dying is for those dying who wish to die well.