# Spousal Kidney Donations in Israel: Religious and Psychoanalytic Perspectives

**Authors:** Moriya Hoter Kariv, Ayelet Oreg

PMC · DOI: 10.1007/s10943-025-02497-y · Journal of Religion and Health · 2025-11-19

## TL;DR

This study explores how married Israeli couples donate kidneys to strangers, combining personal, relational, and religious motivations.

## Contribution

The paper introduces a novel perspective on dual altruistic kidney donations within marriage, integrating religious and psychoanalytic frameworks.

## Key findings

- Participants were motivated by personal fulfillment, relational partnership, and Jewish spiritual values.
- Donation was interpreted psychoanalytically as sublimation, reparation, and self-expansion.
- The study reveals altruistic giving as a form of inner healing and social contribution.

## Abstract

In the existing literature on living kidney donation, most studies address either individual altruistic donations to strangers or familial and friendship-based donations within established social ties. The phenomenon explored here diverges from both: married couples in which each spouse independently donates a kidney to an unknown recipient. This dual altruistic donation, carried out separately yet within the shared framework of marriage, illuminates the intersection of individual moral agency, relational dynamics, and religious faith. Using a qualitative methodology, in-depth interviews were conducted with nine Israeli Jewish religious-nationalist couples (eighteen participants) who each donated a kidney to a stranger. The findings reveal that the decision to donate was motivated by intertwined personal, relational, and faith-based factors. Individually, participants sought meaning, fulfillment, and alignment with moral and spiritual values; relationally, donation reflected partnership, mutual support, and shared ethical purpose; spiritually, it was grounded in Jewish concepts such as Tikkun Olam (“world repair”) and Pikuach Nefesh (saving a life). A psychoanalytic interpretation drawing on Freud, Klein, and Kohut highlights donation as a process of sublimation, reparation, and self-expansion. The couples’ narratives reveal how altruistic giving can function simultaneously as inner healing, relational repair, and social contribution. The study thus offers an integrated understanding of dual altruistic kidney donation as both a spiritual and relational act of repair, expanding the discourse on altruism, marital intimacy, and faith within contemporary Israeli society.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** anxiety (MESH:D001007), dependency (MESH:D019966), paranoid (MESH:D010259), itch (MESH:D011537), schizoid (MESH:D012557), end-stage renal disease (MESH:D007676), depression (MESH:D003866)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## References

12 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12913336/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12913336