On
January 22, 1973 the Supreme Court
decided the case of Roe v. Wade holding that a woman’s right to privacy in the 14th
Amendment let her to terminate her pregnancy for any reason “up to
viability of the fetus” and for the sake of her health even later. While the
“settled law” underlying the case has not been touched, abortion rights are
under daily attack by “a death of a thousand cuts.”
What follows was
drafted in response to an appeal from NARAL
Pro-Choice America for stories about life before Roe V. Wade for use in a new campaign in defense of women’s right to choose, which suddenly—and
back then unexpectedly—seemed under attack again. Today that attack has turned into a siege as
extreme right wing Republicans have taken over state legislatures and
governor’s mansions. It seems like every
week we read of some new attempt to limit abortion access, cut of funds for Planned Parenthood, or even to
re-criminalize it in many cases. The
same forces in Congress are also
busy. And all the while legal cases wind
their way to the Supreme Court that
the American Taliban hopes—and the
rest of us fear—will cause the conservative dominated court to over-turn 40
years of personal freedom. For the many
of you who don’t remember that far back, this is what it was like before that
case was decided.
It was about 1971
in Chicago. We’ll call her Ellen. She was a friend from
college, tall and willowy with Italian
Renaissance brown hair. She had a
chorus part in an experimental rock cantata by night and waited table by
day. She was not my girl friend. I wished she was. I was a forlorn looking
hippy in a cowboy hat and bright orange goatee, the dopey/quirky best pal in a
romantic comedy—the guy who moons around and ends up helping the bad boy with
the megawatt smile get the girl. We met
for dinner about once a week and sometimes went out for a drink after her show
on a Saturday night.
I came over to her place for dinner one night, Liebfraumilch in a stone bottle in
hand. She was crying. “I’m pregnant. I don’t know what to do.” I held her and comforted her. I didn’t ask who the father was. She didn’t volunteer. It was, after all, the lingering twilight of
the ‘60’s.
But I was on the staff of the old Seed, the Chicago underground newspaper. I had connections. I knew people who knew people.
Those people were the Jane Collective, semi-secret action group of the Chicago Women’s Liberation Union who
defied Illinois law and arranged
safe abortions. Later I got to know
names and faces of some of them. They
were true heroes in a desperate time.
I helped Ellen get in contact with Jane. They
arranged for her to see a cooperating doctor.
She had to go alone to the appointment, where she was given a chemical abortifacient. I waited for her in her apartment.
The procedure was as safe as possible, but the cramping
and pain from the induced miscarriage
was serious in Ellen’s case. It lasted
three days. I stayed with her the whole
time. We were afraid to seek further
medical help. Other women had been
arrested in hospital emergency rooms.
In the end, the procedure was effective. Ellen recovered. She got on with her life. She went off the next summer on some high
adventure and I never saw her again. I
got on with my life.
Within a few years, Illinois revised its laws in
response to Roe v. Wade and safe abortions in clinical settings became
available. Jane dissolved. But I will
always remember Ellen’s needless ordeal and will never knowingly allow another
woman to suffer so.
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