French Court: Parents Can Register Names for
Fetuses
By John Jalsevac
PARIS, France, February 8, 2008 (LifeSiteNews.com) - France's supreme
court has ruled that parents of miscarried or stillborn children can register a
name for the child, no matter what stage of development the child was at at the
time of miscarriage or birth, reports the AFP.
Previous to this most recent ruling, parents in France were allowed to
register a name for miscarried or stillborn children, but only after 22 weeks
gestation, or if the child weighed over 1.1 pounds.
This new ruling gives parents the right to claim the body of their
child, which, until this point, was incinerated by the hospital along with
other waste tissues. It also allows the mothers of miscarried or stillborn
children to claim maternity leave.
According to the AFP report, the ruling is triggering a storm over the
issue of abortion in France, with pro-abortion activists arguing that the
ruling gives pro-life activists a strongly emotional argument for the humanity
of the child, by indicating that a fetus at any stage has a right to a name. "A
fetus is only viable after 26 weeks," said Chantal Birman, deputy
president of a pro-abortion group called ANCIC. "You have to take the
timetable of pregnancy into account."
She said that the court decision, "will help a rollback [on
abortion availability] that has been taking place in Europe for the last few
months."
However, there is an increasing recognition in medical circles that
miscarriage or stillbirth can be an extremely traumatic experience for mothers
and fathers alike, who may have developed a profound emotional connection with
their unborn child. "The mourning process can be long and lonely,"
says the Helping After Neonatal Death (HAND) website. "After the death of
a baby, it generally takes twelve to twenty-four months simply to find your new
base."
Many parents have found that the process of grieving is helped
significantly by the giving of a name to their child. "Giving the baby a
name and having the baby baptized or blessed, if such rituals are important to
us, are ways for us to acknowledge the reality of the life that has come and
gone so quickly," says HAND.