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                  <text>10 Features

A threat to choice
Darrah Teitel explores the larger implications of the abortion debate on campus

U

ntil 1969, the leading cause of hospitalization and death for Canadian women under
the age of 30 was botched self-induced abortions, and today, the lack of safe, legal abortions continues to claim lives. According to the World Health
Organization, 70,000 women die worldwide every
year because of self-induced abortions. The Lancet’s
study “Unsafe abortion: The preventable pandemic,”
demonstrated that most of the women affected in
Canada and the U.S. live in rural areas or are poor,
immigrants, or aboriginals. The laws that protect the
right to choose protect bodies, not political ideologies. This is not a philosophical debate or a matter of
opinion. So long as people are dying, this is an issue
of safety and public health.
Judy Rebick, a matriarch of Canadian feminism,
is not surprised that young women are taking their
reproductive rights for granted: “We got the first
Morgentaler clinic open in 1981 and they didn’t
change the law until 1989. In ‘69 you could only get
a safe abortion if the doctor wrote a note saying your
life was in danger. So you basically had to convince
a man you were ready to kill yourself. Of course this
was really classist and racist as well, because most
poor women weren’t connected to the right doctors.
So women were dying all the time or being forced
to bear unwanted, vulnerable children. I don’t think
young women realize what a long and painful battle
it was. I’m worried because we, who remember, will
be gone soon and young women are not aware or
active.”

L

ast winter amidst a flurry of free speech rhetoric,
SSMU councillors gave full club status to an antiabortion activist group called Choose Life. The group
aims to reignite the debate around women’s reproductive rights, to convince women not to have abortions,
and to help the powerful anti-abortion lobby groups,
who are their affiliates, gain legitimacy. Choose Life’s
status seemed to have been granted in the absence of
any real research into the club or the organizations
that fund it, neglecting the fact that Choose Life is a
part of an aggressive movement that threatens female
reproductive rights in Canada.
The club’s mandate and tactics also threaten student safety. On October 2, 2008, when it was decided
to grant Choose Life interim club status, several students came forth and implored SSMU to reconsider.
One woman said from the gallery: “This is a club
which wants to spread ideas on campus that make
me feel unsafe.” Perhaps because they were afraid
to address this significant point, or perhaps because
they were running out of time, no councillor paid
heed to what the members of the gallery were saying,
although 2008-09 VP External Devin Alfaro did offer
this promise: “If something like that happens, we will
act quickly to shut that down. There is a place of discussion, but if anything happens that interferes with
students’ space, we know it is unacceptable.”
During Choose Life’s three-month probationary period as an interim club, three equity complaints were issued against it. These complaints were
addressed and brushed aside during the Council

meeting on February 12 as SSMU granted Choose Life
full-club status. No other probationary club has had
three equity complaints brought against it and still
managed to successfully obtain full-club status.
The remainder of this meeting focused on whether the club had fulfilled its constitutional requirements and the fact that SSMU has no right to discriminate against a club based on ideology. There is no
document that mandates SSMU to treat all ideologies
equally, but there is a document that mandates SSMU
to be anti-oppressive and to maintain an environment
of respect and safety for students. Choose Life’s proliferation of graphic images of fetuses compromises the
campus as a safe space for students, and specifically
targets pregnant women. A uterus is not public space,
and to see it used as a site for a political or philosophical debate makes many women feel harassed.
Behind SSMU’s preferential treatment is the misguided assertion that Choose Life is just another
club. Behind this assertion is a subconscious desire
to normalize and de-politicize a historic struggle for
reproductive freedom. It is easy for privileged “postfeminist” young people to behave condescendingly
toward activists who, they might feel, are hyperbolizing their sentiments for the sake of left-wing politics. However, their concerns are hardly hyperbolic:
female reproductive rights are more vulnerable than
many realize.

T

hree clicks away from Choose Life’s web site is a
group called REAL Women. They call themselves

�The McGill Daily, Monday, October 5, 2009

11

Art and photos by Whitney Mallett / The McGill Daily

an alternative women’s movement and their enemies
are homosexuality, feminism, and abortion. REAL
Women is one of the most powerful federal and provincial lobby groups in Canada. Due to their influence (millions of dollars’ worth of donations from
REAL Women’s members go to the Conservative
Party of Canada), Stephen Harper slashed 43 per
cent of the operating budget of the Status of Women
Canada (a federal government organization that promotes gender equality), in his first months in power.
As a direct result, feminists and pro-choice organizations are barely staying afloat. Harper knows that the
fight against abortion cannot be won in the Supreme
Court, but that it can be crippled by misogynist policy.
Abortion clinics have been closing, and hospitals that once performed abortions no longer do.
According to the federal study “Reality Check” conducted last year by Canadians for Choice, women’s
access to the abortion procedure is steadily on the
decline. The province of New Brunswick will only
allow abortions to be performed in a hospital if two
doctors deem it necessary, and in Prince Edward
Island, abortions are not performed at all. Nearly all
Canadian abortion clinics are within 150 kilometres
of the American border, leaving most rural Canadian
women without reasonable access.
When you type any word into a search engine
pertaining to abortion, pregnancy, or pro-choice in
Canada, the first ten pages that come up are carefully disguised anti-abortion propaganda because

incredibly wealthy, international right-wing religious
groups have purchased the right to dominate Google.
Choose Life is not independent. It exists in the context of something much larger.
By continuing to allow Choose Life to exist on
campus, SSMU is complicit with this larger movement that aims to limit women’s reproductive rights –
their choice to be apolitical has political implications.
Instead of worrying about ideological relativism, they
should take constructive action.

J

eanette Ducet is the Executive Chair of Planned
Parenthood Canada, an organization that receives
absolutely no government funding. She talked to me
about why abortion rights are so easily eroded in
Canada: “It’s because abortion was decriminalized,
but not granted as a right, so this left a legal vacuum
that can be filled with small bits of anti-abortion legislation.”
Ducet was one of two women who debated a notorious anti-abortion preacher from the Canadian Centre
for Bioethical Reform named Jose Ruba last year at
Carleton University. When Choose Life announced
that it would be hosting a debate with Ruba at McGill
entitled “Echoes of The Holocaust,”
Two weeks after this “debate,” Ducet learned that
Carleton University revoked their pro-life club’s status. This angered Ducet because she felt that members of the student body who had invited her to
debate knew in advance the kind of harassment she
and the other women in the room would bear. She

believes that they wanted the outrageous event to
occur so that they would have an excuse to get rid of
their anti-abortion club.

A

t last Thursday’s SSMU council meeting, a
motion was passed by overwhelming majority to censure Choose Life’s event “Echoes of The
Holocaust.” While it is a shame that it required an
invocation of the Holocaust for SSMU to realize
that they have an obligation to protect students
from offensive material, it’s fortunate that students
at McGill were not subjected to the offensive event
Ducet regrettably described.
Councillor Sarah Woolf made the most sense in
Thursday’s debate when she stated that Choose Life
directly violates SSMU’s own equity policy and that
SSMU, being beholden to that policy, has no choice
but to condemn the club’s event. In fact, SSMU was
beholden to their equity policy when they created
the club. The club should never have been allowed
to exist in the first place. In any case, SSMU has
now backed itself in to a corner where the only safe
recourse will be to revoke the club’s official status.

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