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Irelands Pro-Lifers Wary of Treaty
BY Justin Bell REGISTER CORRESPONDENT
November 8-14, 2009 Issue |
Posted 11/1/09 at 11:08 PM
DUBLIN, Ireland â With two
governments, a recent European treaty vote and a suffering economic climate,
pro-life leaders from the island of Ireland face complex challenges. But the
movement has resilient, savvy leaders who are fully aware of the landâs
pro-life heritage and the ongoing battle for life.
Workers in the movement address
concerns on the street, lobby legislators, and connect with the masses through
new media. Often they have looked to pro-life leaders in the United States for
strategy and inspiration. Pro-lifers worldwide look to Ireland with hope, as
the country has held legalized abortion at bay.
However, the Oct. 2 vote in the
Republic of Ireland ratifying the Treaty of Lisbon has many pro-life leaders
concerned. The treaty, which the Irish turned down in June 2008, is an
initiative to revamp structures for the European Union. All 27 member states of
the EU have to ratify it for it to take effect. Ireland was No. 26, and now the
Czech Republic is debating its ratification.
Despite a hard-fought campaign
against the treaty, the Irish voted 67% in favor of it. Opponents have been
alarmed at the idea of losing sovereignty. Many Irish pro-lifers were worried
that the nationâs constitutional defense of an unborn childâs right to life
could be overridden by a European court.
Niamh Ui Bhriain, an Irish pro-life
activist who was part of a Lisbon Treaty opposition group called Coir, spoke of
the amount of information given to the Irish people encouraging them to vote
Yes.
âSince January of this year, we have
just had a stream of propaganda on the media, from the European Commission, of
all the fiscal parties, and it has been ad nauseam,â she said.
She believed the message from the
Yes camp was: âIf we donât vote Yes, weâll lose jobs and weâll never recover
economically, and weâll be thrown out of the European Union.â She believes that
the fact that the Irish economy has worsened since last year was a major factor
in the vote.
The Irish bishops stated that an
Irish Catholic could vote Yes or No in clear conscience.
âIt was not a treaty involving faith
and morals; it was a treaty to reform the administrative structure of the
European Union,â said Martin Long, director of communications for the Irish
Catholic Bishopsâ Conference.
In their Sept. 21 statement
on the matter, the bishops declared, in part, âIt remains our responsibility,
as citizens of Ireland and as citizens of the European Union, to promote
vigorously the âgospel of lifeâ as described by Pope John Paul II in the
encyclical Evangelium Vitae.â
They encouraged all Christians to
become educated on the treaty and vote for the common good.
History of Abortion Laws
Both the Republic of Ireland and
Northern Ireland, part of the United Kingdom, have a precedent for legal
protection of the unborn from the 1861 British law Offences Against the Person
Act, which forbade abortion.
In 1983, the Eighth Amendment was
added to the Irish Republicâs constitution to acknowledge âthe right to life of
the unborn, with due regard to the equal right to life of the mother.â
Concerned citizens had seen the passing of Roe v. Wade in the
United States and desired to ensure that their unborn were protected.
However, in 1992 the constitution
was further amended on this matter after the âXâ case. This involved a
14-year-old Irish girl who sought an abortion in England after being raped and
reported suicidal thoughts. Initially, a High Court injunction forbade her
from having the abortion, citing the Eighth Amendment. But then the Irish
Supreme Court overturned the directive.
Ultimately, the girl had a
miscarriage, but the case led to a referendum where voters were given three
amendments to decide on.
In response to this, Ui Bhriain and
five others started a pro-life organization called âYouth Defenceâ to rally the
Irish people against a possible and hasty allowance of abortion in demand, due
to the X case. Youth Defence staged rallies of 10,000-12,000 people.
But two of the three amendments
passed that changed the âright to lifeâ amendment. The 13th amendment âwould
not limit freedom to travel between Ireland and another state,â and the 14th
âwould not limit freedom to obtain or make available information relating to
services lawfully available in another state.â
However, voters turned down the 12th
amendment which would allow for abortion if it was necessary to save the life
of the mother, except for suicide. However, the passing of the 14th amendment
paved the way for referrals in Ireland for abortions outside of the country. Ui
Bhriain stated that leading up to the vote the Irish government âstrenuously
deniedâ this amendment would allow for referrals.
Raised in a large family that was
aware and concerned about social issues, Ui Bhriain had watched Joseph
Scheidlerâs efforts in the United States after the passing of Roe vs. Wade. A
veteran pro-life activist, Scheidler employed strategies of protests at
abortion clinics.
âThe whole concept was amazing to
us, that someone would have to do this, that you would be obliged in a country
to make those interventions, to stick up for mothers and babies in that way
because abortion was a reality that happened every day in the States,â said Ui
Bhriain, a wife and mother of four.
Labeled âextremeâ or âmilitantâ by
critics, Youth Defence uses graphic images of abortion in their street outreach
campaigns and in their yearly âroad show.â This extended street campaign makes
stops across towns and cities throughout Ireland each summer. They also
distribute glossy informative brochures and have had an engaging, colorful and
regularly updated website for years. In addition, the group and its spin-offs
have launched highly organized campaigns to bring awareness of life issues to
the forefront of Irish society.
Northern Ireland
In Northern Ireland, abortion with
the sole intent to kill an unborn child is illegal. The Abortion Act of 1967,
which legalized abortion in the United Kingdom, has not been extended to
Northern Ireland. However, âreferral clinicsâ arrange abortions in England for
women in Northern Ireland
Bernadette Smyth founded the
organization Precious Life in 1997. A Catholic, Smyth attended a Divine Mercy
conference in Dublin and heard a riveting talk by Pat Mahoney, an American
Reformed Presbyterian minister and activist. He stressed the importance of
keeping abortion out of Ireland.
Smyth looked over brochures from the
conference back home in Ballymena, Northern Ireland. âThe first time I came
face-to-face with the horror of an abortion (was) through the images of aborted
babies and the reality of how abortion affected women,â she said.
She said she felt challenged by the
question âWhat was I to do to defend the least of the little ones?â and took it
to prayer.
Smyth, a wife and mother of four,
and her supporters have made Precious Life a serious pro-life force in Northern
Ireland. Smyth and her helpers stand outside referral clinics to give women
information about abortion and their health. She believes that nine out of 10
pregnant women in Northern Ireland considering abortion would choose life if
given the right information and opportunity.
Smyth also lobbies members of
various political parties â both Catholic and Protestant â in the Northern
Ireland Assembly and employs street outreach techniques similar to Youth
Defence.
Contemporary Challenges
Ui Bhriain believes that grassroots
campaigns are vital in keeping public opinion on the side of life. The group
she helped found is planning a conference called âViva La Vidaâ to be held
later this month. Featured speakers include Americans Gianna Jessen, an
abortion survivor, and Lila Rose, a University of California, Los Angeles,
student and pro-life activist who has highlighted practices of Planned
Parenthood by posing as a pregnant teenager.
Back in Ballymena, Smyth believes
that Northern Ireland and the Irish Republic are strongly linked in regards to
protecting the unborn. Indeed, shoppers from the republic can cross the border
to save money on groceries in Northern Ireland, a change from the military
security of the Troubles. If abortion on demand were legalized in either part
of the island, it would mean lives lost on the other. The current threat in the
north is the introduction of abortion guidelines issued by a British health
department. Smyth believes this is a backdoor attempt to offer abortion and a
way to desensitize people. Precious Life is collecting signatures for a
petition that will be given to the Northern Ireland government.
âWe have a Christian heritage here,
and we continue to uphold that,â Smyth said. âWe have saints and scholars who
went before us, who defended the Christian faith, the Catholic faith, and we
certainly are not about to sit back and allow the legalized slaughter of our
children to be unleashed here in Ireland; and weâll continue to pray that the
scourge of abortion does not come to us, this beautiful, our beautiful Irish
island.â
Justin Bell writes from
Somerville,
Massachusetts.
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