By Ilyse Hogue
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Nelson Mandela (AP Photo/Theana Calitz-Bilt) |
Nelson
Mandela’s passing has elicited a flood of personal memories and tributes from
people he touched across the world. I am one of those people. In elementary
school in Dallas in the early 1980s, I was fascinated by the televised images
of mock shanty-towns on US college campuses. Questions about the South African
divestment campaign started me down a path that opened up a world of social
justice and politically inspired change.
In
2003, I visited South Africa during the World Summit on Sustainable Development
and spent weeks working alongside local organizers in townships around
Johannesburg and learning about the strategies they used to thrive even under
the oppressive apartheid regime. Everywhere I went, I was blown away by how
powerful the women were. Vocal and forthright, they were often their
communities’ spokespeople and leaders.
That
experience of strong female leadership owed more than a little to the Constitution of 1996, put in place largely by Mandela. In its new Bill of Rights it listed not only
race as impermissible grounds for discrimination, but “gender,” and then “sex”
and then, uniquely, it also added “pregnancy.”
And in case the meaning of that
was not clear, the Bill of Rights went on (emphasis added):
Everyone
has the right to bodily and psychological integrity, which includes the right
a. to
make decisions concerning reproduction
b.
to security in and control over their body; and
c.
not to be subjected to medical or scientific
experiments without their informed consent.
This
official recognition that gender equality requires embracing reproductive
freedom remains a high-water mark of international law. This important commitment
was foreshadowed by a bill passed months before the constitution went into
effect.
The
Choice on Termination of Pregnancy law—which
replaced one of the most restrictive abortion laws in the world with one of the
most liberal and humane—allows South African women full autonomy to decide when
to terminate a pregnancy in the first trimester, complete with financial
assistance if required. (Abortion is also allowed within widely defined
exceptions in the second trimester.) With this act, President Nelson Mandela
transformed the lives of millions of South African women.
In
the Jewish tradition we have a saying we repeat at every Passover Seder:
“dayenu,” or “it would have been enough.” It would have been enough for Nelson
Mandela to put his life on the line in 1964 in the struggle for racial
equality. It would have been enough for Mandela to inspire us through his
twenty-seven years in prison.
It
would have been enough for him to lead successful negotiations with
then-President de Klerk to abolish apartheid. But once he had become his
country’s first black president, instead of resting on his laurels—or resting,
period—he tackled the issue of abortion, which was considered even more
controversial in South Africa at the time than it was here. Why would he do
this?
In
his famous April 20, 1964, “Speech from the Dock,” given just before
he was sentenced to life imprisonment, he offered a clue: I
have cherished the ideal of a democratic and free society in which all persons
live together in harmony and with equal opportunities. It is an ideal which I
hope to live for and to achieve. But if needs be, it is an ideal for which I am
prepared to die.
The
simple answer, then, is that he had more left to do. Mandela acted, as he
always had, not out of political calculation but with laser-like moral focus.
He knew that for women to have full freedom and equality, we must have autonomy
over all issues pertaining to our lives, especially our reproductive destiny.
Mandela’s
intimate experience with poverty and oppression showed him that reproductive
freedom was intrinsically tied to economic security. Thus, this Nobel Peace
Prize winner known worldwide for his pursuit of human equality chose as one of
his first acts of elected leadership to cement that fundamental cornerstone of
women’s equality into law.
Although
a solid, consistent majority of Americans support the protections outlined in Roe v. Wade,
well-funded attacks on reproductive freedom are consuming an enormous amount of
time and attention in our country. So I was fascinated to see in all the press
coverage of Mandela’s death how little was said about his legacy of advancing
abortion rights.
It’s
been mentioned primarily on women-defined blogs and press, which is
important, but not enough. Major network tributes and even mainstream
progressive outlets have not seen fit to mention it.
Unsurprisingly,
his legacy championing women’s basic freedoms is not lost on extremists in this
country hell-bent on taking them away.
With their typical tone-deafness, they
opine: “Nelson
Mandela has the blood of preborn children on his hands … lots of them,” wrote anti-choice blogger Jill Stanek on
Saturday.
“[I]t
makes no sense for pro-life Christians to praise Mandela’s example considering
what he did with that power once he became president,” wrote Paul Tuns, editor of the Canadian
pro-life publication The
Interim.
“The
organization Keep Life Legal asked the question: “What about apartheid
in the womb?”
One
of the first things I noticed when I joined NARAL
Pro-Choice America as president was how much these extremists depend
on their aggressive public vitriol to stigmatize the medical procedure of abortion
and silence the majority in this country who understand that reproductive
rights are vital to the freedom and self-determination that makes us Americans.
The anti-choice lobby trades in hatred and fear to frighten people into
avoiding the issue so they can win by forfeit.
In
attacking the moral leadership of one of the world’s most beloved freedom
fighters, these zealots have once again gone too far. But their slander is not
the only reason we must talk about Mandela’s contributions to women’s freedom.
We must go there, because he went there.
If
we want to honor Nelson Mandela’s commitment to a society “in which all persons
live together in harmony and with equal opportunities,” we only do it justice
when we loudly recognize that his vision of human dignity included women’s
freedom to make their own decisions about when we have children.
Tribute
after tribute has unfolded with this chapter deleted, leaving all the successes
and gains for South African women invisible. I am not going to bow to that
pressure to hold my tongue. I will praise Mandela loudly and proudly for
refusing to leave women behind. And if enough of us do so, maybe someday soon
all women can be assured the respect and freedom that Mandela fought to bring
to the women of South Africa.
Source: http://www.thenation.com

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