Coming Out on Abortion
By Monika Rodman, Anne Marie Tassone, Steve Finnegan, John Watkins And Vicki
Evans
Berkeley Daily Planet
Edition Date: Tuesday, February 15, 2005
Saturday, Jan. 22 marked the 32nd anniversary of the U.S. Supreme Court‘s
Roe v. Wade decision, which abortion rights supporters celebrated as
necessary for women‘s equality and well-being. Here in the Bay Area, a new Roe
tradition began on that day - a first ever Walk for Life in honor of those whose
lives were ended before birth, and in support of women and men who bear the
scars of abortion.
We who walked did not do so in judgment of any individual who has been
through abortion; we walked for justice toward the most vulnerable members of
our human family, calling our neighbors to embrace a better choice: Non-violent
response to unplanned pregnancy. Together with Alice Paul, author of the
original Equal Rights Amendment, we view abortion as "the ultimate
exploitation of women."
As Bay Area residents, we know we represent a minority opinion on abortion.
We are not surprised that abortion rights proponents were threatened by our
incursion on their perceived territory. A local Planned Parenthood spokesperson
fretted, "(w)e couldn‘t believe that they had the nerve to come to San
Francisco." What did surprise us was that our own elected officials in San
Francisco, Berkeley and Oakland "unwelcomed" us in no uncertain terms by
declaring our cities "pro-choice and proud." Remarkably, those who otherwise
celebrate diversity are unable to imagine any diversity of opinion on abortion.
While "pro-lifers " may be a Bay Area minority - portrayed by abortion rights
activists as exotic and fearsome creatures - we are everywhere. We‘re behind you
waiting to pay our bridge toll, on the mat next to yours at yoga class, ahead of
you in line at the Berkeley Bowl or Farmers' Market. We actually lead pretty
normal lives, juggling work and home responsibilities. We send relief money to
Asia and sponsor children in Africa. Some of us have worked in teen sexuality
education or helped those experiencing unplanned pregnancy.
We who pen this piece include a single, adoptive mother, two San Francisco
natives (one of whom serves on the city‘s fire department), and a homeless
shelter volunteer. We were happy to march with farmers from Fresno, blue-haired
grandmothers from Modesto, and students from UCSF, Stanford and UC Berkeley.
None of us are outsiders in the cause of justice toward preborn children.
For each of us our anti-abortion commitment represents part of a broader
vision of social justice. We have agitated for health care and immigrant rights
and demonstrated against wars, apartheid and the death penalty. It is natural
for us publicly to oppose a violence carried out daily much closer to home, in
medical facilities we pass on our way to work.
Some of us have had abortions or paid for them. Many of us only realized the
destructiveness of abortion after making the choice. Others have lost a sibling
to abortion or were ourselves at risk of abortion due to the circumstances of
our own conception. Understandably, we are uneasy with any assertion that our
lives had value before birth only if someone else wanted us.
Just 150 years ago the rhetoric of personal choice was employed to uphold the
institution of slavery: slaves were judged to be the personal property of their
owners - not unlike today‘s judgment that preborn children are the property of
their mothers, to be discarded if she or someone influencing her does not want
the child.
"Pro-lifers" are here to stay. On Jan. 22 we walked to challenge our
neighbors to a higher ideal than that embodied by Roe. On the remaining 364 days
of the year we will work in quiet, largely hidden ways, so that one day soon
each and every child may be both protected by law and welcomed into life.
Monika Rodman is a Berkeley resident. Her co-authors are residents of
Oakland, San Francisco and Marin County, respectively.