Catholic New York,
July 6, 1995
'I Was a Person'
Abortion survivor tells her story at
Manhattan pro-life benefit
By BRIAN CAULFIELD
Four weeks after she survived an abortion that killed her
twin brother in the womb, Sarah Smith said, "I started kicking."
"I sit here not as an apparition, not as some voice from the
grave. I'm a person, just like anyone else," said Ms. Smith, 24, who was born
with serious medical problems five months after the abortion,
"I absolutely forgive my mother for the abortion," she
continued. "She was like the majority of women who go for abortions, totally
ignorant of what she was doing and uninformed about the consequences."
After realizing that she was still pregnant, her mother went
back to the doctor who did the abortion. He told her that the baby was very
likely severely deformed or brain dead and recommended another abortion.
Her mother said, "No way, I feel it kicking and I know now
it's alive," Ms. Smith told a Manhattan audience recently.
"I am an abortion survivor," she continued. "Let my face be
that point of reference for everyone to know what is being killed in the womb.
When you hear the word 'choice,' think of me. My life, my limbs were meant to be
torn apart."
She added, "I am a person now, I was a person then. It's time the U.S.
Supreme Court realized that. Once they do, Roe vs. Wade will crumble."
She told her remarkable story at a luncheon June 14 at the
Harvard Club. The event was held to raise money for Expectant Mother Care and
the Legal Center for the Defense of Life.
For the past two years, the young woman from Redondo Beach,
Calif., has been traveling around the country with her personal pro-life
message. In January, she and her mother spoke to thousands of people at the
March for Life in Washington, D.C., and since then she has appeared on numerous
television news and talk shows. She intends to devote her life to the pro-life
cause, she said, and has taken a year off from pre-med studies for the work.
Her schedule will be interrupted when she undergoes a double
hip replacement to correct a degenerative condition related to the circumstances
of her birth, she said.
She was 14 when her mother first told her about the abortion
of her twin brother, later named Andrew. Her mother had five children at the
time of the abortion and did not think she could bear the stress of another
child, she said.
It took Ms. Smith many years and an abortion of her own
following a teenage date rape before she decided to go public with her story.
"I tried to block it out of my mind and get on with my life,
but it didn't work," she said.
She had dreams about her aborted brother and felt that she
had to do something to preserve his memory. Since then she has come to realize
that as long as one unborn baby is denied the right to life, she also is denied
that right in theory, because she was supposed to have been killed, she said.
Her work over the past two years has brought strong
opposition from abortion advocates.
She said a woman on a call-in show told her, "You shouldn't
be talking about these things. You should be dead."
Four weeks after she survived an abortion that killed her
twin brother in the womb, Sarah Smith said, "I started kicking."
"I sit here not as an apparition, not as some voice from the
grave. I'm a person, just like anyone else," said Ms. Smith, 24, who was born
with serious medical problems five months after the abortion,
"I absolutely forgive my mother for the abortion," she
continued. "She was like the majority of women who go for abortions, totally
ignorant of what she was doing and uninformed about the consequences."
After realizing that she was still pregnant, her mother went
back to the doctor who did the abortion. He told her that the baby was very
likely severely deformed or brain dead and recommended another abortion.
Her mother said, "No way, I feel it kicking and I know now
it's alive," Ms. Smith told a Manhattan audience recently.
"I am an abortion survivor," she continued. "Let my face be
that point of reference for everyone to know what is being killed in the womb.
When you hear the word 'choice,' think of me. My life, my limbs were meant to be
torn apart."
She added, "I am a person now, I was a person then. It's time the U.S.
Supreme Court realized that. Once they do, Roe vs. Wade will crumble."
She told her remarkable story at a luncheon June 14 at the
Harvard Club. The event was held to raise money for Expectant Mother Care and
the Legal Center for the Defense of Life.
For the past two years, the young woman from Redondo Beach,
Calif., has been traveling around the country with her personal pro-life
message. In January, she and her mother spoke to thousands of people at the
March for Life in Washington, D.C., and since then she has appeared on numerous
television news and talk shows. She intends to devote her life to the pro-life
cause, she said, and has taken a year off from pre-med studies for the work.
Her schedule will be interrupted when she undergoes a double
hip replacement to correct a degenerative condition related to the circumstances
of her birth, she said.
She was 14 when her mother first told her about the abortion
of her twin brother, later named Andrew. Her mother had five children at the
time of the abortion and did not think she could bear the stress of another
child, she said.
It took Ms. Smith many years and an abortion of her own
following a teenage date rape before she decided to go public with her story.
"I tried to block it out of my mind and get on with my life,
but it didn't work," she said.
She had dreams about her aborted brother and felt that she
had to do something to preserve his memory. Since then she has come to realize
that as long as one unborn baby is denied the right to life, she also is denied
that right in theory, because she was supposed to have been killed, she said.
Her work over the past two years has brought strong
opposition from abortion advocates.
She said a woman on a call-in show told her, "You shouldn't
be talking about these things. You should be dead."