Praise be to Allaah.
Donating organs is not all on one level. There is the
donation of organs on which life depends, and there is the donation of
organs on which life does not depend.
If the donation is of an organ on which life depends, such as
the heart or liver, it is not permissible to donate it, according to the
consensus of the scholars, because that is killing a soul.
But if it is an organ on which life does not depend, such as
a kidney or blood vessels, then there is a difference of opinion among
contemporary scholars, and there are two views on this matter:
1 – That it is permissible to transplant human organs
2 – That it is not permissible to transplant human organs
Fatwas stating that it is permissible have been issued by a
number of conferences, seminars and committees, including: the International
Islamic Conference held in Malaysia; the majority of the Islamic Fiqh
Council, whose fatwa may be seen in the answer to question no. 2117; the
Council of Senior Scholars in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia; and the Fatwa
Committees in Jordan, Kuwait, Egypt and Algeria.
It is also the view of a number of scholars and researchers,
including Shaykh ‘Abd al-Rahmaan ibn Sa’di.
Some of the scholars favoured the view that transplants are
permissible on condition that the donor is a harbi kaafir (i.e., one who is
in a state of war against Islam, not one with whom the Muslims have a
treaty, or who is living under Muslim protection), because the harbi kaafir
has no sanctity, whereas the sanctity of the Muslim is established in life
and in death.
For more information see the book Ahkaam al-Jaraahah
al-Tibbiyyah by Shaykh Muhammad al-Mukhtaar al-Shanqeeti, pp. 354-391
And Allaah knows best.