French doctor who made Down discovery closer to sainthood

FILE - In this Aug.22, 1997 file photo, Pope John Paul II meditates by the grave of his former friend geneticist Jerome Lejeune, during a private visit to the Chalo-Saint-Mars cemetery near Paris. Pope Francis on Thursday, Jan. 21, 2021, approved the heroic virtues of Dr. Jerome Lejeune, who discovered the genetic basis of Down syndrome, lived from 1926-1994 and was particularly esteemed by St. John Paul II for his anti-abortion stance. (AP Photo/Arturo Mari/file) (Arturo Mari)

ROME ā€“ The French doctor who discovered the genetic basis of Down syndrome but spent his career advocating against abortion as a result of prenatal diagnosis has taken his first major step to possible sainthood.

Pope Francis on Thursday approved the ā€œheroic virtuesā€ of Dr. Jerome Lejeune, who lived from 1926-1994 and was particularly esteemed by St. John Paul II for his anti-abortion stance.

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The papal recognition of Lejeuneā€™s virtues means that he is considered ā€œvenerableā€ by the Catholic Church. The Vatican must now confirm a miracle attributed to his intercession for him to be beatified, and a second one for him to be declared a saint.

According to his official biography, Lejeune in 1958 discovered the existence of an extra chromosome on the 21st pair during a study of the chromosomes of a child. It was the first time scientists had found a link between an intellectual disability and a chromosomal anomaly; the condition is now known as trisomy 21.

ā€œAlthough the results of his research should have helped medicine to advance toward a cure, they are often used to identify children carrying these diseases as early as possible, usually with the aim of terminating pregnancy,ā€ the Jerome Lejeune Foundation wrote in its biography.

ā€œAs soon as the pro-abortion laws were drafted in western countries, Lejeune began advocating for the protection of the unborn with Down syndrome: he gave hundreds of conferences and interviews across the globe in defense of life,ā€ the group said.

John Paul in 1974 made Lejeune a member of the Vaticanā€™s Pontifical Academy of Sciences think tank and later named him the first chairman of the Pontifical Academy for Life, the Holy Seeā€™s main bioethics advisory commission.

John Paul visited Lejeune's grave during the Paris World Youth Day in 1997.

Though John Paul made the churchā€™s firm opposition to abortion a hallmark of his quarter-century papacy, Francis too has strongly denounced what he calls today's ā€œthrowaway cultureā€ that considers the weak, disabled or sick disposable. He has likened abortion to hiring a ā€œhit manā€ to take care of a problem.


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