Hemophilia in the Talmud and Rabbinic Writings
FRED ROSNER, M.D.

Ann Intern Med. 1969;70(4):833-837. doi:10.7326/0003-4819-70-4-833 

SUMMARY:

A familial bleeding disorder, probably hemophilia, is described in 
the Talmud. The decree of Rabbi Judah that the sibling of two 
brothers who died of bleeding after circumcision may not be 
circumcised is codified by Jewish sages of the last 10 centuries. 
Such rulings are found in the works of Alfasi (eleventh century); 
Maimonides (twelfth century); Jacob ben Asher and Asher ben Yechiel 
(fourteenth century); Karo and Isserles (sixteenth century); Azulay, 
Reischer, and Landau (eighteenth century); and Epstein (nineteenth 
century), among others. Modern Rabbinic authority extends this ruling 
to any child, even the firstborn, in whom a diagnosis of hemophilia 
can be established by coagulation studies.

This ruling was stated only in regard to siblings or maternal cousins 
as only the direct maternal transmission of the disease was 
recognized. Omitted from all the Jewish sources is a consideration of 
the child whose maternal uncles died of bleeding after circumcision.

------------------------

Say, I thought this list was supposed to be about psychology :-)

Stephen

--------------------------------------------
Stephen L. Black, Ph.D.          
Professor of Psychology, Emeritus   
Bishop's University
Sherbrooke, Quebec, Canada               
e-mail:  sblack at ubishops.ca
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