Vincent Lambert: French court
orders life support to resume
Sign reading "alive" in French during protest against euthanasia (AFP) |
While a court order in France reverses procedures to stop
feeding and hydrating Vincent Lambert, in the Vatican Pope Francis reaffirms
that life is “God’s gift, from its beginning until its natural end”.
By Vatican News
Vincent Lambert is 42 years of age and has been hospitalized
in Rheims since 2008 following a motorcycle accident. He is quadriplegic and
has suffered severe brain damage, but he continues to breathe autonomously.
While some doctors describe him as being "minimally consciousness",
others claim he is in a "chronically vegetative" state.
On Monday, medical staff began turning off the life support
systems that feed and hydrate Lambert, despite appeals from his parents to the
contrary. The new court ruling reverses that procedure.
Appeals by Pope Francis
Also on Monday, Pope Francis reaffirmed the position of the
Church by publishing a tweet on his @Pontifex account. The text reads as
follows:
“We pray for those who live with severe illness. Let us
always safeguard life, God’s gift, from its beginning until its natural end.
Let us not give in to a throwaway culture”.
Last year, the Pope launched two appeals for Vincent Lambert,
along with the case of little Alfie Evans. Before the Regina Coeli on April 15,
he said: “I entrust to your prayer people like Vincent Lambert in France and
little Alfie Evans in England, and others in different countries, who live,
sometimes for a long time, in a state of serious infirmity, requiring medical
assistance for their basic needs. These are delicate situations that are very
painful and complex. We pray that every patient will always be respected in his
or her dignity, and treated in a way appropriate to their condition, with the
whole-hearted contribution of family members, doctors and other health workers,
and with great respect for life”.
During the General Audience of Wednesday April 18, Pope
Francis added: “I would like to reiterate and strongly confirm that the only
master of life, from its beginning to its natural end, is God. Our duty is to
do everything to protect life”.
Appeal by Archbishop of Rheims
In a statement, the Archbishop of Rheims, Eric de
Moulins-Beaufort, said: “It is the honour of a human society not to let one of
its members die of hunger or thirst and to do everything possible to maintain
appropriate treatment until the end.
To allow oneself to renounce it because such a cure has a
cost or because it would be useless to let the human person live, would ruin
the efforts of our civilization. The greatness of humanity consists in
considering the dignity of its members, especially the most vulnerable, as
inalienable and inviolable”.
Intervention by UN Committee
The United Nations Committee on the Rights of Persons with
Disabilities had urged France to intervene and delay the move to switch off
life support while it continues to investigate further the case of Vincent
Lambert.
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