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The Case Against Abortion

The three deadliest words in the world - "It's a girl" !

Life Network Australia - Wednesday, August 24, 2011

The pro abortion rhetoric "It is a woman's choice" ignores the plight of so many baby girls who do not reach womanhood because they are aborted, killed or abandoned - The United Nations estimates some 200,000,000 girls are missing due to sex selection as a result of family planning in China and India. 
It's a Girl Documentary here

Footage and information such as this is a big problem for groups such as EMILY's List who pride themselves on being pro "choice" and who claim to promote equal opportunity for women!

Richard's story.

Life Network Australia - Wednesday, June 08, 2011

My journey through abortion
Used with permission

When I was around the age of 19, my girlfriend came to me one day and told me we were going to have a baby. We had been together for a couple of years and this was a topic we had discussed more than once, should something like this happen.

Sophie refused to tell anyone, especially her parents at that stage, which made things very difficult. I finally convinced her we needed to see a doctor and we went to my doctor to confirm the pregnancy and ensure Sophie was ok. I’m a bit hazy on whose idea it was, whether it was my Dr’s or ours but we ended up at the local hospital being assessed by a social worker.

After many lengthy interviews, both together and separately we were seen as a young couple that could successfully raise a child. And we were ok with that. Due to the social worker’s decision, it was not an option for Sophie to have a legal abortion, from the hospital’s criteria. This was one of the options discussed in the interviews.  I believed at the time we could make this work for our child, even if we didn’t live as a couple.

I finally convinced Sophie we must tell her parents.  I asked her Mum to come on a walk with me and we got no more than 20 yards from the house and she turned and looked at me and asked how far on Sophie was. She’d known all along. This was at the 3month mark.

It was out in the open. I was sure I was going to get dragged out the back of the woodshed, but instead Sophie’s father informed me they were worried Sophie would destroy my life. That was definitely not what I was expecting, nor did I agree with it.

After 27 years some of the exact sequence is lost but somewhere around this time a third party became involved, a woman and her husband .

The next thing I was being informed that Sophie was being taken to Auckland by this third party to the only illegal abortion clinic in NZ at the time. I don’t remember being referred to in the process, it just happened –Sophie and our baby were gone.

Sophie returned a few days later, I went to see her, we just sat, what could you say? I was numb. We stayed together as a couple, as I wanted to be there for her as best I could but the strain grew too much between us and we began to push each other away and tear each other apart..

During this time I had to do something with all the feelings churning inside and I had no one to talk to about it. I was suppressing it all. Who does a young guy talk to about this kind of situation? Talk to the wrong group of friends and you get told you were lucky – you’ve got a second chance at life – that’s not how I saw it at all. I was concerned what the trauma of the situation would do to my own immediate family so I just buried it deeper. I would only really speak of it when I was drunk or under the influence of other substances and with people I felt safe with.

At that time I was a keen outdoorsman so I went to a picturesque lake I knew and had spent many happy hours at. It was and still is a special place. I paddled to the most remote section of the lake and on a small hill I made a little grave and placed a simple cross for our daughter. Since becoming a Christian some 22 years ago and becoming aware of the grace of God, I’ve given my daughter the name Jasmine.

Eventually we ended our relationship. I moved 1000km away and began a new life. I returned to my old town about a year later for a family occasion and as I walked down the street and rounded a corner I walked straight into Sophie. She was heavily pregnant.

We just stopped and stared at each other. We didn’t say a word. Slowly we moved off still staring at each other. I’ve since learnt that often after an abortion a woman may experience a tremendous need to have another child

I later found out Sophie gave that child to her sister to raise.

Approximately 18months later I received a phone call very late one night. It was my Mum. Sophie had taken her life.

There is a road I can drive down whenever I return to that area, and from it I can see Jasmine’s lake and hill.  The entire area has since been set aside as a wildlife sanctuary not to be disturbed.

I’ve only just started to tell my story and it stirs up a myriad of feelings. Some of the strongest ones are the anger, frustration and sheer grief that I didn’t want anyone to die and I couldn’t protect either of them. Also I wasn’t permitted to be with Sophie when she was in one of her darkest moments in her life. Other times I stop and wonder what Jasmine would be like if she were here now.

My hope is that in time more men will speak up about their experiences and through that, change will occur. Ultimately, greater support will be provided, and there will be a deeper understanding of how men feel and cope with the experience of abortion - which, by the way, we don’t do very well. Personally I believe, suppressed grief from abortion could well contribute to many of the health issues men face and don’t deal with. We’re very good at self-medicating.

The pain doesn’t go away as such but I’ve learnt to live with it and embrace it and move forward with it through the Cross of Jesus. It’s in that place where He can touch my heart, take my pain and grief; and in turn enable me to move on by His Grace.

There are many different seasons with grief, and it is important to be gentle on yourself in working through it. The guilt and shame have been the most difficult to deal with. Sharing my story firstly in a safe environment was such a tremendous help in overcoming the shame. I’d encourage any male struggling to email Open Doors or a likeminded support group and take that bold step. In that place, healing will begin to flow.

I’d like to thank my beautiful wife and our five children, without their support and encouragement I wouldn’t be standing before you. I’ve only just begun the next part of my journey through abortion.

 

Conceived in rape - Rebecca's story.

Life Network Australia - Thursday, January 20, 2011

 Rebecca Kiessling is an international pro-life speaker from the U.S, an attorney, a wife and mother of five. Her life story is inspiring - having been conceived in rape, she has made it her mission to change the negative stereotypes and expectations surrounding pregnancies by rape and to advocate for lives like hers that are often aborted.
"I do hope that, as a child conceived in rape, I can help to put a face, a voice, and a story to this issue" - Rebecca Kiessling.

The following article has been used with permission.

We've all heard someone say "I'm pro-life, well, except in cases of rape . . ." or "I'm pro-choice, especially in cases of rape !"

Have you ever considered how really insulting it is to say to someone, "I think your  mother should have been able to abort you."?  It's like saying, "If I had my way, you'd be dead right now."  And that is the reality with which I live every time someone says they are pro-choice or pro-life "except in cases of rape" because I absolutely would have been aborted if it had been legal in Michigan when I
was an  unborn child, and I can tell you that it hurts. 
But I know that most people don't put  a face to this issue -- for them abortion is just a concept -- with a quick cliche, they  sweep it under the rug and forget about it. 

I was adopted nearly from birth.  At 18, I learned that I was conceived out of a brutal rape at knife-point by a serial rapist.  Like most people, I'd never considered that abortion applied to my life, but once I received this information, all of a sudden I realized that, not only does it apply to my life, but it has to do with my very existence.  It was as if I could hear the echoes of all those people who, with the most sympathetic of tones, would say, “Well, except in cases of rape. . .  ," or who would rather fervently exclaim in disgust: “Especially is cases of rape!!!”  All these people are out there who don’t even know me, but are standing in judgment of my life, so quick to dismiss it just because of how I was conceived.  I felt like I was now going to have to justify my own existence, that I would have to prove myself to the world that I shouldn’t have been aborted and that I was worthy of living.  I also remember feeling like garbage because of people who would say that my life was like garbage -- that I was disposable.

I've often experienced those who would confront me and try to dismiss me with quick quips like, “Oh well, you were lucky!” Be sure that my survival has nothing to do with luck.  The fact that I’m alive today has to do with choices that were made by our society at large, people who fought to ensure abortion was illegal in Michigan at the time – even in cases of rape, people who argued to protect my life, and people who voted pro-life.  I wasn’t lucky.  I was protected.  And would you
really rationalize that our brothers and sisters who are being aborted every day are just somehow "unlucky"?!!

Although my birthmother was thrilled to meet me, she did tell me that she actually went to two back-alley abortionists and I was almost aborted.  After the rape, the police referred her to a counselor who basically told her that abortion was the thing to do.  She said there were no crisis pregnancy centers back then, but my birthmother assured me that if there had been, she would have gone if at least for a little more guidance.  The rape counselor is the one who set her up with the back-alley abortionists.  For the first, she said it was the typical back-alley conditions that you hear about as to why "she should have been able to safely and legally abort" me -- blood and dirt all over the table and floor.  Those back-alley conditions and the fact that it was illegal caused her to back out, as with most women. 

Then she got hooked up with a more expensive abortionist.  This time she was to meet someone at night by the Detroit Institute of Arts.  Someone would approach her, say her name, blindfold her, put her in the backseat of a car, take her and then abort me . . . , then blindfold her again and drop her back off.  And do you know what I think is so pathetic?  It’s that I know there are an awful lot of people out there who would hear me describe those conditions and their response would just be a pitiful shake of the head in disgust:  “It’s just so awful that your birthmother should have had to have gone through that in order to have been able to abort you!”  Like that’s compassionate?!!  I fully realize that they think they are being compassionate, but that’s pretty cold-hearted from
where I stand, don’t you think?  That is my life that they are so callously talking about and there is nothing compassionate about that position.  My birthmother is okay – her life went on and in fact, she's doing great, but my life would have been ended.  I may not look the same as I did when I was four years old or four days old yet unborn in my mother’s womb, but that was still undeniably me and I would have been killed through a brutal abortion.

The nasty disposition and foul mouth of this second back-alley abortionist, along with a fear for her own safety, caused her to back out.  When she told him by phone that she wasn't interested in this risky arrangement, this abortion doctor insulted her and called her names.  To her surprise, he called again the next day to try to talk her into aborting me once again, and again she declined and was hurled insults.  So that was it -- after that she just couldn’t go through with it.  My birthmother was then heading into her second trimester – far more dangerous, far more expensive to have me 
aborted.

In law school, I’d also have classmates say things to me like, “Oh well!  If you’d been aborted, you wouldn’t be here today, and you wouldn’t know the difference anyway, so what does it matter?”  Believe it or not, some of the top pro-abortion philosophers use that same kind of argument:  “The fetus never knows what hits him, so there’s no such fetus to miss his life.”    And if a baby is aborted, and no one else is around to know about it, does it matter?  The answer is, “YES!  Their lives matter.  My life matters.  Your life matters and don’t let anyone tell you otherwise!

According to the research of Dr. David Reardon, director of the Elliot Institute, co-editor of the book Victims and Victors:  Speaking Out About Their Pregnancies, Abortions and Children Resulting From Sexual Assault, and author of the article "Rape, Incest and Abortion:  Searching Beyond the Myths," most women who become pregnant out of sexual assault do not want an abortion and are in fact worse-off after an abortion.  http://www.afterabortion.org
So most people's position on abortion in cases of rape is based upon faulty premises:  1) the rape victim would want an abortion, 2) she'd be better off with an abortion and 3) that child's life just isn't worth having to put her through the pregnancy. 

I hope that my story, and those following, will be able to help dispel that last myth.

For Life,
Rebecca
rebecca@rebeccakiessling.com

Rebecca's website has footage from three women who were raped and who defied pressure from society to abort their babies. Their stories are both beautiful and powerful - well worth watching.  http://rebeccakiessling.com/PregnantByRape.html


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