A British appellate judge has denied the request by the parents of Alta Fixsler, a two-year-old Jewish child with severe brain damage, to appeal a lower court ruling that a hospital may remove the child from life support. The family will now appeal to the Supreme Court.

The lower court had ruled that the hospital may remove Alta from life support despite her parents’ argument that their religious rights as Jews allow them to do all that is necessary to keep Alta alive. The judge said that it could not be assumed that the young child, who is cognitively impaired, would necessarily accept the same religion as her parents.

The Jewish community worldwide mobilized a movement to get British officials to allow Alta, whose mother is Israeli and father is Israeli-American, to at least leave the U.K. and receive continued treatment in Israel or the U.S.

American activists including Rabbi Moshe Dovid Niederman of UJO, Rabbi Chaim Dovid Zwiebel of Agudath Israel, and Rabbi Moshe Margaretten of Tzedek Association have been heavily involved in the lobbying effort. Ten Republican U.S. senators wrote a letter to President Joe Biden last month, urging him to “advocate to Prime Minister Johnson on behalf of the Fixsler family.” Democratic Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer helped secure a visa request for Alta to travel to the United States.... Read More: Hamodia