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German TV viewers vote in favor of euthanasia

November 24, 2020

The film "God," aired by German broadcaster ARD, poses questions on assisted suicide for a 78-year-old man who has lost the will to live. Over 70% of viewers said doctors should give him access to a lethal drug.

The cast of the ARD movie "God"
Image: Julia Terjung/ARD Degeto/Moovie GmbH/dpa/picture alliance

A majority of German television viewers voted in favor of assisted suicide for a movie protagonist, according to a poll issued by the Germany's public broadcaster ARD during the airing of the film God.

The movie focuses on a fictional ethics council while it is mulling over the desire of the main character, 78-year-old Richard Gärtner, to die. Gärtner, portrayed by veteran German actor Matthias Habich, argues he has lost the will to live due to the death of his wife.

Read moreGermany’s top court paves the way for assisted suicide

On Monday evening, viewers chimed in over whether a healthy person had the right to ask their doctor for access to a deadly medication. Just over 70% of viewers voted in favor of allowing euthanasia, while 29.2% were against offering access to the lethal drug. The movie was also shown in Switzerland, where around 68% also endorsed the right to euthanasia.

Moral dilemma for doctors

In the film, several parties representing a range of perspectives sat around a hearing to debate the issue. Those figures included the fictional character Gärtner, his lawyer, a doctor, a law professor and a bishop. The chairwoman of the ethics council also repeatedly addressed the audience in the film, urging them to consider the dilemma and vote.

Read moreNew Zealanders vote to legalize euthanasia but not cannabis

The disputed question was not over which forms of euthanasia doctors may use, but rather, whether doctors have an obligation to meet a patient's wish of ending their own life, regardless of their age or health.

The film is based on the play Gott by Ferdinand von Schirach, which was shown in September in Berlin and Düsseldorf. The text poses several existential questions, including who a human life belongs to, and if the age of a person matters when they are choosing to end their life.

Read more:Dutch government backs euthanasia for under-12s 

At the end of the movie, the ethics council doesn't give a definite moral stance and instead leaves the outcome open.

Germany overturns euthanasia ban

In February, Germany overturned a five-year-old ban on medically assisted suicide, again legalizing the procedure for terminally ill patients. The disputed law, which made "commercial promotion of assisted suicide" a criminal offense, had pushed several terminally ill people to go to Switzerland and the Netherlands to end their lives.

A similar film aired in October 2016, asking viewers the moral question of whether to shoot down a passenger plane to save others. At the time that the movie aired, almost 90% of viewers voted that the military should shoot down a passenger plane carrying 164 people, in order to save 70,000 innocent people in a soccer stadium.

Read moreDutch euthanasia clinic sees jump in death assistance requests

The 2016 movie showed the court finding the fictional pilot not guilty in accordance with the audience wishes.

lc/dj (dpa, KNA)

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