Yaar · 3 min
Faith, culture, and fertility
5 sections · 3 min read
Is faith actually the barrier to male fertility treatment?
Many South Asian men worry that fertility treatment, particularly , conflicts with their religious beliefs. The reality is more nuanced than the stigma suggests.
Cultural pressure often gets confused with religious teaching. The extended family's discomfort with fertility treatment is usually cultural, not theological. Understanding this distinction can reduce unnecessary guilt and delay.
What do Islamic teachings say about fertility treatment for men?
The majority of Islamic scholars permit and fertility treatment when: • The sperm and egg come from the married couple (not a donor) • The embryo is placed in the wife's womb • The treatment does not involve a third party Islam encourages seeking medical treatment. The Prophet Muhammad (PBUH) said: "Make use of medical treatment, for Allah has not made a disease without appointing a remedy for it" (Abu Dawud).
Where it becomes more complex: donor sperm, donor eggs, and surrogacy are generally not permitted in mainstream Islamic jurisprudence, though some scholars differ. If you have specific questions, speak to a knowledgeable imam who understands modern medical procedures.
What do Sikh teachings say about fertility treatment for men?
Sikhism does not prohibit medical fertility treatment. The Sikh faith emphasises the will of Waheguru (God) but also encourages humans to use knowledge and science to address suffering.
There is no scriptural prohibition against , , or other fertility treatments in Sikh theology. Cultural attitudes within Sikh families may be more conservative, but these are cultural positions, not religious ones.
The stigma around childlessness in Sikh families is cultural, not from Gurbani. Guru Nanak's teachings emphasise compassion and support, not judgment of those facing hardship.
What do Hindu teachings say about fertility treatment for men?
Hinduism generally supports medical fertility treatment. The concept of "dharma" includes the duty of procreation, and using medical means to fulfil this is widely accepted.
Ancient Hindu texts actually describe practices resembling assisted reproduction. Modern Hindu scholars generally support when it involves the married couple's own gametes.
Family pressure around fertility in Hindu families is often about the continuation of the family line, particularly the desire for a male heir. This is cultural patriarchy, not religious teaching. Hindu theology does not assign blame for infertility.
What does cultural pressure around fertility actually look like?
When your uncle asks when you're having children. When your mother-in-law hints at prayer remedies. When relatives suggest that if you just relaxed, or went to a particular temple, or saw a particular practitioner, everything would be fine.
This is cultural pressure dressed as care. Most of the time, it comes from a place of love, but it can be deeply harmful when it delays proper medical treatment or adds guilt to an already difficult situation.
You don't need permission from your family to see a doctor. You don't need spiritual clearance to get a . Medical treatment and faith can coexist.
How did this land with you?
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Reviewed by clinicians
Authored and reviewed by clinicians from the founding team. Information only, not personalised medical advice.