In the Netherlands, the first euthanasia of a child aged between 1 and 12 is forcing the world to confront what “compassion” really means. Under the new rules, a doctor, parents, and—if possible—the child must all face an unbearable truth: there is no cure, no relief, no future beyond constant, severe pain. Only then can life legally be ended.
Every step is wrapped in safeguards: medical proof that no humane alternative remains, a specialized review committee of doctors, a lawyer, an ethicist, and finally the scrutiny of prosecutors. Supporters insist this is the last, hardest act of love.
Opponents fear a line has been crossed that can never be uncrossed. Between those two visions stands a silent child, known only to their family, whose short life now defines one of the most harrowing moral frontiers of our time.