| Science and Sunnah: The 
Genetic Code 
 Dr. Ibrahim B. SyedClinical 
  Professor of Medicine
 University of Louisville School of Medicine
 Louisville, KY 40292
 and
 President, Islamic Research Foundation International, Inc
 7102 W. Shefford Lane
 Louisville, KY 40242-6462
 E-Mail: IRFI@INAME.COM
 Website:  
  http://WWW.IRFI.ORG
 
 HADITH 4   On the authority 
of Abu 'Abd ar-Rahman 'Abdullah ibn Mas'ud (May Allah be pleased with him), who 
said: The Messenger of Allah (may the blessings and peace of Allah be upon him) 
and he is the truthful, the believed, narrated to us: Verily the 
creation of each one of you is brought together in his mother's belly for forty 
days in the form of seed, then he is a clot of blood for a like period, then a 
morsel of flesh for a like period, then there is sent to him the angel who blows 
the breath of life into him and who is commanded about four matters: to write 
down his means of livelihood, his life span. His actions, and whether happy or 
unhappy. By Allah, other than Whom there is no god, verily one of you behaves 
like the people of Paradise until there is but an arm's length between him and 
it. And that which has been written overtakes him and so he behaves like the 
people of Hell-fire and thus he enters it; and one of you behaves like the 
people of Hellfire until there is but an arm's length between him and it. And 
that which has been written overtakes him and so he behaves like the people of 
Paradise and thus he enters it. It was related by al-Bukhari and Muslim, (Ref: An-Nawawi's "Forty Hadith". 
Translated by Ezzeddin Ibrahim and Denys Johnson-Davis. The Holy Koran 
Publishing House, Damascus, Syria, 1977, pp. 36-38.) 
 There are some Muslim thinkers who do 
not like the interpretation of Qur'an or Sunnah in terms of scientific 
terminology. However, the author believes there is nothing wrong in attempting 
to understand or interpret "Islam" in the light of modern knowledge. Through 
this article the author wants to encourage freethinking, stimulate research 
ideas among Muslim scholars, scientists and students so that our understanding 
of Qur'an and Sunnah can be furthered. This Sunnah deals with the creation of 
human beings which is mentioned in great detail in Al-Qur'an. However, the 
astounding and astonishing matter about this Hadith is the angel who blows the 
breath of life into man and writes down four matters: (1) his means of 
Livelihood, (2) his life span, (3) his actions, and (4) whether happy or 
unhappy. 
 Before the scientific discovery of the 
Genetic Code and the award of Nobel Prizes to the three discoverers in 1968, it 
was humanly impossible to scientifically understand this Hadith. In 1990s, we 
are able to unravel the genetic code with regard to a person's inheritance of 
certain disease carrying genes. This information may tell us about an 
individual's life span and/or whether he will be happy or unhappy. Science is 
yet to discover the genes responsible for a person's "rizq" (food habits, 
dietetic profile, etc.) and a person's "actions" or behavior such as Type A, B, 
or C personality.   The present article attempts to show 
our current knowledge in our ability to perform genetic screening in order to 
understand a person's inheritance of carrying or developing a certain disease 
through the study of that person's genes. Our knowledge is still incomplete and 
we are very far away in attaining the knowledge about the four matters mentioned 
in this Hadith. Inside the nucleus of a living cell 
there are 46 chromosomes which are visible only when the cell divides. The 
chromosomes are made of DNA or deoxyribonucleic acid. A certain length of the 
DNA is called the gene. That length of DNA that codes for complete synthesis of 
a protein is also called a gene. Along the 46 chromosomes of every human cell 
are some 100,000 genes. The U.S. Government is funding a $3 billion, 15-year 
Human Genome Project, under the joint leadership of the National Institutes of 
Health and the Department of Energy, which will allow scientists to know exactly 
where on our chromosomes each of our 100,000 genes reside. Among these 100,000 
genes, there are a few genes, which can be lethal. Every person has a unique set 
of these seven or eight deadly genes. They are usually hidden, but in the wrong 
environment or in combination with certain other genes they can express 
themselves in dangerous ways. Some families carry genetic diseases for 
generations and they know what type of lethal genes they carry. Most of the 
people do not know if they carry any genetically defective genes.   In the near future it is possible to 
get a blue print of our genetic inheritance-and with the knowledge of the most 
likely cause of our own death. This test can be performed by walking into a 
physician's office and giving a blood sample with a finger prick. The results of 
the test reveal if a person has any defective genes that will cause a certain 
disease or the result may be negative in which case that person will not carry 
the disease. Most of the adult-onset diseases involve several genes. For example 
there are at least 17 genes responsible for just one aspect of coronary heart 
disease-and the genes express themselves only under certain conditions. For most 
of the genetic diseases it is impossible to predict with a certainty. 
Geneticists now say that diabetes, hypertension, and cancer run in families. In 
other words these diseases are genetically inherited. Geneticists can treat 
adults for the presence of a handful of relatively rare genes - among them those 
that cause Huntington's disease (causes progressive brain degeneration); adult 
polycystic kidney disease (causes gradual loss of kidney function); polypsos 
(this condition leads to colon cancer); hemochromatosis (which could cause liver 
failure); and certain forms of cancer such as retinoblastoma, some leukemias, 
and small-cell carcinoma of the lung.   There are two important questions, 
which have not been answered so far. The first one is whether knowledge of the 
information is itself potentially hazardous to the individual; and the second 
one is whether institutions will misuse that knowledge to promote their own 
dominance and control.   There are two types of tests: prenatal 
tests and genetic screening tests. The prenatal tests inform future parents of a 
child's chances of inheriting a condition for which the parent is a 
carrier-Tay-Sachs disease, sickle cell disease, cystic fibrosis- or of 
inheriting a condition from which a family member has already died-muscular 
dystrophy, hemophilia, beta-thalassemia. The genetic screening test tells the 
adults about their own genetic destiny. But do we really want to know? Are we 
willing to learn the details of our genetic destiny-especially when it involves 
diseases for which there is no cure? Are we capable of understanding the 
uncertainties inherent in this high-tech fortunetelling?   Adult polycystic kidney disease comes 
late in age and causes degenerative condition of the kidneys resulting in 
gradual loss of kidney function. It is carried on a single, dominant gene. If a 
man has the disease, then his son has a 50-50 chance of having the gene and if 
he has two daughters, their chances of having the disease is also 50-50. Usually 
this disease strikes when one is in his or her 110's. The genetic test only 
tells whether a persons has the gene that causes the disease, but it doesn't 
tell whether that person gets the disease in his UO ' s or in his late 60's. No 
treatment exists to prevent kidney failure in polycystic kidney patients. 
 There is a certain amount of 
unwillingness on the part of humans to know their future. However there are 
individuals who have taken the tests for the occurrence of Huntington's disease 
which is a neurological disease, a progressive and untreatable brain and muscle 
degeneration with symptoms that usually show themselves in the 40's. The chances 
of inheriting this disease causing gene is also 50-50. Those who 
took the test and whose results were positive, there were no instances of 
suicide and only one of severe depression, and one marital breakup among the 71 
patients screened.   Nancy Wexler of the Hereditary Disease 
Foundation says "If the information is limiting, enervating, depressing, if it 
tears at your self-esteem, if it gives you nothing to do, it might be better not 
to know." She devoted her professional life to the search for the gene for 
Huntington's disease which killed her mother and for which she and her sister 
are at risk.   Scientists stress that the results of 
genetic testing are ambiguous: genes alone do not determine a disease's 
prognosis. One can say whether or not an individual appears to have the gene, 
and those who have the gene have gone on to develop the disease. But one cannot 
say anything about when the disease will start, what will be the course of the 
disease, and what will be the relevant aspects of the illness. 
 The danger comes when imprecise tests 
are used inorder to predict the future, and when institutions actually use them 
to construct the future: when employers refuse to hire or train individuals at 
high risk of dying in their prime; when health-insurance companies insist on 
knowing the genetic profiles of their potential subscribers before paying for 
pre-existing genetic conditions; when schools require a permanent genetic record 
to anticipate which children will exhibit behavioral problems or learning 
disabilities. In United States genetic discrimination already exists. The risk 
of increasing the number of people defined as unemployable, uneducable or 
uninsurable exists. Genetic tests can identify employees who are susceptible to 
workplace toxins and companies may prohibit hiring such employees because they 
may contract occupational illnesses. 17 companies out of 500 had used genetic 
tests within the last 12 years, and 59 were considering the possibility. There 
is the danger of using the genetic tests for purposes of "eugenics." Eugenics 
means the deliberate manipulation of the gene pool with the idea of creating a 
master race. Defective people walking around may not be allowed to reproduce for 
the betterment of society.   Many of the conditions that will be 
uncovered through genetic studies are not life threatening, but might not fit 
into some societal scheme: genetic dyslexia, for example; genetic shyness; 
genetic arrogance; genetic left-handedness.   It is known that left-handed people 
have shorter life expectancies, which is relevant to insurance companies. But 
left-handed people may suffer for lack of knowledge whether left-handedness 
occurs for reasons other than genetic. They may be construed from birth as 
brain-damaged. Allah is all knowing.      |