France Jun 25, 20260Add to bookmarks

Five days before the solemn vote on assisted dying, a documentary film titled "Anesthésia" is circulating in Catholic and pro-life circles. It reveals what statistics and amendments conceal.
An investigative film titled Anesthésia, focusing on the excesses of euthanasia, is circulating within French Catholic and pro-life circles ahead of the solemn vote on June 30, 2026. According to available information, it documents testimonies from healthcare professionals and families facing pressure to opt for assisted dying in medical contexts where other solutions existed. Its release coincides with the decisive week preceding the National Assembly vote.
Documentary cinema is an often underestimated tool of cultural resistance. Five days before the vote, Anesthésia serves a role that op-eds and amendments cannot: making visible what statistics conceal—the individual suffering, institutional pressures, and troubled consciences. The Church has always distinguished between authentic care for the dying—palliative care, which the instruction Samaritanus bonus (Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith, 2020) explores in depth—and the deliberate act of causing death. Though not an ecclesiastical document, this film advocates for the same line of demarcation: caring until death, not administering death as care. Let us name what this bill euphemistically calls "aid in dying": it is assisted suicide or euthanasia, depending on the modalities involved.
"The truth will set you free" (Jn 8:32). In the face of legislative newspeak, a filmed testimony can achieve what legal arguments no longer suffice to do: touch consciences. Watch this film. Share it.
Aide à mourir : le référendum bloqué, l'Assemblée dans la semaine du vote