Egypt’s Azhar issues fatwa allowing pigs' kidneys to be transplanted to humans

Egypt's Al-Azhar, the foremost religious institution in Egypt, has ended an ongoing debate by allowing pig's kidneys to be transplanted to humans but only 'if necessary.'
1 min read
26 October, 2021
Muslims around the world look to Egypt's Al-Azhar for religious guidance [Getty]

Cairo – Egypt's top religious institution, Al-Azhar, ended an ongoing debate this week by issuing a fatwa (or religious ruling) permitting pig's kidneys to be transplanted into a human body, but only under certain conditions.

The debate began after a group of American surgeons in New York successfully managed to transplant a pig’s kidney to a human patient earlier this month, tapping a renewable source of organs which are in short supply.

In Islam, a pig is considered an unclean animal and the Quran prohibits Muslims from consuming its meat. 

Al-Azhar, which was founded as an Islamic university more than a thousand years ago, is considered Egypt's highest religious authority and Muslims around the world look to it for guidance.

“[Islam] forbids being medicated by whatever is harmful, filthy [or] prohibited,” Al-Azhar said in the fatwa.

However, the fatwa added that if the use of the organ is to save a life, it could be permissible, only “if necessary.”

The Quran places great emphasis on the saving of human life, saying in one verse, "And whoever saves a life it is as though he had saved the lives of all mankind".

Exceptions can usually be made to religious rules in order to save lives or for other necessities.