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Anti-Catholic Bias in Mercy-Killing Campaign?
BY Elenor Schoen REGISTER CORRESPONDENT
October 19-25, 2008 Issue |
Posted 10/14/08 at 9:35 AM
OLYMPIA, Wash. — The Church is
becoming a target of proponents of a ballot initiative that would legalize
doctor-assisted suicide in Washington state.
The Church denies any
inappropriateness in anti-suicide efforts, which now include ads featuring
actor Martin Sheen, a Catholic.
“Catholic Church Funnels Abuse Money
into I-1000 Opposition,” claims a headline on the website of Compassion &
Choices, which is pushing the initiative. The story claims that the Public
Disclosure Commission reported that “out-of-state sexual abuse reparations” are
being sent to help fund the anti-assisted suicide effort in Washington state. (More
on Washington’s assisted suicide bill, page 3.)
But opponents point out that no
report exists showing a connection between funds for sexual abuse reparations
and donations to the anti-assisted suicide organization. The Public Disclosure
Commission merely lists the donors to campaigns, which, for the Coalition
Against Assisted Suicide, happens to include donations from several Catholic
dioceses around the country.
But the constant refrain in media
reports about Washington’s effort to legalize assisted suicide is that “the
Catholic Church is the main contributor” to the anti-assisted suicide
coalition. It’s become the tag line for the pro-initiative group Yes on I-1000,
as well as one of its chief “scare” tactics, aimed at those living in an
unchurched region.
Joel Connelly, a columnist for the Seattle
Post-Intelligencer newspaper, wrote recently that: “While it doesn’t
carry the full stench of bigotry, I-1000 campaigners are dispensing noxious
stuff, at least to a chosen few of the secular faithful.”
In
his column on “Catholic baiting” by the pro-assisted suicide camp, Connelly
revealed a memo dispatched by Anne Martens, the pro-initiative group’s
communications director. Martens referred to Pope Benedict XVI’s September
visit to Lourdes, where he stated: “Dignity never abandons the sick person.”
The Pope said that people must accept death at “the hour chosen by God.”
Martens
suggested that the Pope “does not go into detail about God’s appointment book,
although many doctors note that God is, in fact, kept waiting past the chosen
hour due to medical interventions that artificially extend life [but do not end
suffering]. Perhaps God is running late.” “In an America where any remark
hinting of prejudice can force its maker into endless mea culpas,
the mocking of a world religious leader ought to invite political suicide,”
Connelly, an “Anglican Catholic,” wrote.
But
the Church appeared to be exempt, he said, at least by “some advocates of
Initiative 1000.”
Connelly
said the memo “demeans fundamental questions raised in the Pope’s speech,” questions
that are being raised in the discussion surrounding assisted suicide, he noted.
‘We Respect Faith, But’
When
questioned about the attempts to target the Church and its involvement in
defeating an initiative on physician-assisted suicide, Anne Martens stated: “We
respect everybody’s faith, but we don’t think they should impose it on the
entire state.”
Barbara
Coombs Lee, president of Compassion & Choices — the Oregon-based
organization funding the pro-death initiative — distanced herself from Martens
by saying that the director of communications, is “a political operative [who]
speaks for the campaign, not for me or Compassion & Choices.”
However,
Lee then described the Church as being “as much a vast and powerful political
force as it is a religion.” She believes the Church’s lobbyists “wield enormous
power in statehouses and Congress, influencing lawmakers to embed Catholic
doctrine in law,” adding that “Catholic lobbying and political tactics are
relentless and ruthless.”
The
Church has “no more moral authority as a lobbyist and political
operative than any other corporate entity furthering its self-interest through
political means,” she emphasized. She wrote off the accusations of “Catholic
baiting” as merely “naming a powerful political force and defending against
it.”
Dominican
Sister Sharon Park, executive director of the Washington State Catholic
Conference, is all too familiar with the strategies used by Compassion &
Choices and their Yes on I-1000 campaign. She said that before the Church began
to publicly respond to the threat of the assisted suicide initiative,
pro-initiative campaigners claimed that the Church “will be the enemy.”
This
just confirms to Sister Sharon that I-1000 proponents may fear they don’t have
the votes, so they resort to “creating an enemy.” But far from being
discouraged, she said that the Washington State Catholic Conference of Bishops
believes that “not only do we have the right to be involved in this
anti-assisted suicide campaign, we have an obligation to do so.”
The
Church’s teachings “are very clear and very strong that patients always have
the right to withhold or withdraw medical treatments and technology if there is
no hope for recovery,” said Sister Sharon. The Church’s long history of caring
for the poor, vulnerable and sick is in stark contrast to what is offered in
the assisted suicide legislation. Instead of providing a lethal overdose, “we
provide care,” she said.
“Why
would we not alleviate suffering rather than eliminating the one who suffers,”
Sister Sharon argued. “There is no reason for this initiative. Compassion &
Choices is playing on emotion, fear and anti-Catholic bias.”
Connelly
recalled that when he first wrote about assisted suicide — focusing on the
personal experience of dealing with his father’s prostate cancer and eventual
death, “a political consultant for the Initiative 1000 campaign sent me a nasty
e-mail, telling me to ‘keep your religious beliefs to yourself.’”
Connelly
said: “I had to ask myself: Did Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. keep his
religious beliefs to himself?”
Martin Sheen
But the Coalition Against Assisted
Suicide seems to not be fazed about anti-Catholic bias as it launches a
$750,000 broadcast advertising campaign, headlining actor Martin Sheen speaking
out against I-1000.
Chris Carlson, chairman of the
coalition, stated that Sheen, an “outstanding actor and a person of impeccable
integrity,” is also noted for his “tireless efforts to help low-income people
[and] vulnerable populations.” Carlson said Sheen’s concern has “earned him the
reputation of a man who is compassionate and walks his talk.”
Sheen, a Catholic, emphasized that
he wanted to make a statement against assisted suicide when he heard about
I-1000, adding that he wanted “to help stop it before it harms people who are
at risk.”
Sheen explained that we have a
health-care system “where the more money you have, the better medical care you
receive.” The actor concluded: “Initiative 1000 is a dangerous idea — because
so many people do not have the money necessary to get the care they need.”
Carlson pointed to the proponents of
Initiative 1000, who believe that “assisted suicide is favored by good
Democrats, liberals and progressives. But that’s just not the case.” He
acknowledged: “I’m a Democrat; Martin Sheen is a Democrat; and many people
opposed to I-1000 are progressives — and that’s why we’re opposed.”
Elenor Shoen is based
in Shoreline, Washington.
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