When Domenica Asciutto entered hospital she had everything to live for. The
young woman was about to give birth to her first child, and with her husband
Carmelo she shared a neat and comfortable home in Melbourne's north west.
But Mrs Asciutto's faith was about to lead her to a decision few others would
be prepared to make. Seriously ill after severe complications from childbirth,
she refused a potentially life-saving blood transfusion. On Wednesday night she
died in the Alfred Hospital, days after giving birth to a stillborn child,
Jessica.
Like Mrs Asciutto, Australia's 60,000 or so Jehovah's Witnesses remain
committed to the church's doctrine forbidding blood transfusions - despite signs
the church's American-based headquarters is softening its position. Last month
the Watchtower Society issued a statement from New York that has been
described as a don't ask, don't tell policy.
Witnesses who accept transfusions and do not genuinely repent are no
longer disfellowshipped (excommunicated) but regarded as disassociating
themselves. The policy means Witnesses effectively have to come forward
with an admission of guilt.
Yet spokesmen for the church in Australia and New York deny there has
been any practical change, and insist the church remains opposed to
transfusions.
But Associated Jehovah's Witnesses for Reform on Blood, an international
reform group within the church, believes the statement may herald the start
of a wider shift on blood policy.
The AJWRB said earlier this month that the church continues to
disfellowship Witnesses who take drugs or commit adultery so it is
noteworthy that they have singled out blood transfusions as one sin to be
treated differently
Last month the church also indicated in a statement that receiving
transfusions of minor components of blood - not formally defined - is
acceptable. (Patients today rarely receive whole blood transfusions, as
scientists have learnt how to fractionalise blood into separate parts.)
But the church's city supervisor in Melbourne, Mr Des Zanker, said
yesterday that suggestions that the church had softened its policies on
blood were absolute lying propaganda. They have come from apostates
who have left the faith he said.
He also rejected suggestions that the church had eased its policies in
Europe because governments there were refusing to grant legal recognition
to the church because of its no-blood policy. We don't compromise to
spread our faith he said.
Mr Zanker said witnesses were finding it easier, not harder, to reject blood
transfusions because the medical profession was more supportive and more
bloodless methods of treatment had become available.
The number of people (entering the church) who bring it up as an issue is
minuscule. These days we find people in hospital who say they are
Jehovah's Witnesses so as not to have a blood transfusion.
Mr Zanker said some people had died as a result of transfusions, and it
was by no means certain that a transfusion would have helped Mrs
Asciutto.
For now, at least, it seems there will be little change towards blood among
the church's Australian followers.