It sounds unusual to hear news like this, but the legislation of some countries allows it. It is the first case of embryo implantation of a deceased woman in a rental womb, which allowed the birth of a baby two years after his mother died.
It happened in Israel, where after a long legal battle, the attorney general's office allowed a man to use two of the frozen embryos years before his wife, Keren, died due to cancer.
They had tried unsuccessfully to have a baby by artificial insemination before she became ill with a brain tumor. Cancer forced her to paralyze the fertility treatment she had begun to have children, but it was her desire to bring a child into the world, even if she died.
The embryos were preserved, so the husband requested and managed to realize his wife's dream and assert his right to be a father, "since 50 percent of the genetic material is his."
The fact is that a few days ago I was born in the United States, from a surrogate mother, a girl with the genes of her biological mother who has not come to know.
It continues to impress that a baby born two years after his mother died, but knowing the story we can not stop getting excited knowing that a couple's dream has come true and that a desired and loved baby has come into the world.