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CERTIFIED Pre-Owned ONLY AT YOUR LEXUS DEALER ithin the next two weeks, Sara G. will un- dergo an intensive ul- trasound examination at the Brooklyn IVF Center in Dyker Heights. Technicians will count the number of eggs in her ovaries, test her hormone levels and see how her body is re- sponding to the fertility drugs Lupron and Pergonal. If the results are encouraging, Sara and her husband, Men- achem — a Chasidic couple in their mid-20s who have been un- able to conceive for five years — will begin preparations for in-vit- ro fertilization (IVF). The hoped- for procedure, for the most part, would be no different than some 33 IVF attempts performed an- nually in the United States at about 275 clinics — except for the presence of Rabbi Abraham Friedlander and Judy Fischer, who will be carefully watching the doctors and embryologists. Rabbi Friedlander is the chap- lain at Maimonides Medical Cen- ter, which is affiliated with Brooklyn IVF, and Fischer is a patient representative who spe- cializes in Orthodox needs. Mesh- ing the strictures of ancient halachic (Jewish law) sensibili- ty with the innovations of phys- ical science, the center says it has created the first program for hashgacha, or kosher certifica- tion, of assisted reproduction out- side Israel, where the practice is common. The program answered the needs of many religious cou- ples who were upset over some well-publicized cases of abuse, such as tampering by fertility doctors, says the Brooklyn IVF director, Dr. Richard Grazi. From the moment semen and ova are collected through the point of fertilization and im- plantation in Sara's uterus, Rab- bi Friedlander or Fischer will ensure that the semen and ova collected from Sara and Men- achem cannot be switched — ei- ther deliberately or accidentally — with those of another couple. Between collection and implan- tation, the embryos are placed in a locked incubator — only Rab- bis Friedlander and Fischer have the keys. Embryologists are un- able to perform any work in their absence. It is this service, provided on request, that drew Sara and Menachem — who live outside New York City — to Brooklyn IVF. "For us, it all boils down to who you trust," says Menachem, not his real name, who is con- cerned about the stories of tam- pering. "You try to do your best to cover as many bases as you can, and the hashgacha in the lab gives you that halachic peace of mind." Hundreds of couples have used the artificial insemi- nation supervision service, Grazi says, with about a dozen utiliz- ing it for IVF. Most authorities agree that there is no halachic consequence for a woman im- pregnated by the sperm of a man other than her husband, or for her offspring. The child is con- sidered Jewish, with no effect on his or her marriageability, un- like the product of an adulterous liaison, or mamzer, which may only marry another mamzer. Yet the concept of yichus , or one's bloodline — is so central to Judaism that some rabbis, in- cluding the late Lubavitcher rebbe, have stipulated that IVF may only take place under prop- er religious supervision. "We are very protective of our genetic line," says Grazi. "There are some people who do hold that the is- sue is mamzerut [illegitimacy]. But yichus is a very important concept in the Jewish communi- ty. That's one of the reasons why the use of sperm donors is often discouraged, even though ha- lachically there are many rea- sons to permit it." One of the issues raised by switched sperm or ova could per- tain to the child of a kohen, or high priest. If his lineage is in doubt, the male child of a kohen may not perform the priestly. blessings. A less likely complica- tion could stem from the possi- bility of an egg or sperm coming from a close relative. The fee charged to a couple ranges from $75 to $350, de- pending on the procedure. And the Brooklyn program seems to be setting a trend: A similar pro- gram was announced recently by the Brandeis Center in Manhat- tan, using the Baltimore-based Star K supervision service, best known for restaurant and food certification. But while rabbinic supervision of sperm and ova may seem silly or unnecessary to some, it is serious business for Orthodox couples dealing with the sensitivities of fertility ther- apy. "A lot of people snickered and sneered when they heard the concept," says Fischer. "Unfor- tunately, nobody's snickering anymore. They've read in the newspapers about the case of a clinic in California where some not-so-kosher things were going on with eggs and sperm." ❑ New York Jewish Week