STATEMENT OF DEFENSE
CANADIAN PRO-LIFER MARY WAGNER'S STATEMENT OF DEFENSE
On June 25, 2001 Mary
Wagner and Glenn Reed sat in front of Vancouver's Victoria Drive abortuary door
and as a consequence were then taken to jail by members of the Vancouver police.
Glenn was released after agreeing to certain conditions. Mary didn't agree and
was put into maximum security at the Burnaby Correctional Centre for Women, 7900
Fraser Park Drive, Burnaby BC V5J 5H1.
On July 19, 2001 both went
to court. Glenn was given 2 years probation. Mary was given a jail sentence of 3
months and a day in addition to the 24 days she had already served. She was then
handcuffed and transported back to maximum security at BCCCW.
The following is Mary's statement of defense.
July 19/01
Your Honour,
My friend and co-accused,
myself and many others are deeply troubled. We are troubled by the hard truth,
that in our country and throughout our world, child after child is being killed
before she has left her mother's womb. What is most shameful is that we, who are
grown, continue to allow our tiniest sisters and brothers to be destroyed. We do
little to protect the vulnerable child who is at risk of being aborted. We allow
her mother to make the grave mistake of aborting, instead of welcoming her
child. We are guilty of both the avoidable deaths of countless children, and of
the unimaginable damage to their mothers. Were we on trial today for the neglect
of pre natal children causing death, and harm to women, we would surely be
convicted.
Instead, we are on trial
for attempting to protect some of our young sisters and brothers, who were
scheduled to be killed on June 25, 2001. We have no legal defence for peacefully
intervening where children are routinely killed. We have no legal defence,
because those of us who had the power to do so, have passed laws which say that
you, Your Honour, were not a person from the moment you were conceived, until
the moment you totally emerged from your mother's body. In other words, our law
says that personhood begins when a "non-person" comes forth from the
womb of the "non-person's" mother. The first nine months of your life,
as you grew and were nourished in the warmth and security of your mother's womb
were in law, irrelevant. You existed, but not legally were you acknowledged.
Your Honour, most of the
laws of this country are based on reason, though this is not always, nor has it
always been the case. As recently as last century, women and First Nations
people were not considered people in Canadian law. With the clarity of
hindsight, we can see how unreasonable and unjust this was. Must we live as
blindly as those of past generations, defying reason and justice to preserve the
legal status quo? How can we, when the legal status quo permits the killing of
over 100 000 Canadian each year?
Henry David Thoreau, in
his essay, "On the Duty of Civil Disobedience", remarks "Must the
citizen ever for a moment, or in the least degree, resign his conscience to the
legislator?...
It is not desirable to
cultivate a respect for the law, so much as for the right." Thoreau was an
American citizen who was writing in opposition to slavery, which at that time,
1849, had the endorsement of his government.
Thoreau made an important
observation. "It is not desirable to cultivate a respect for the law, so
much as for the right", simply because the law can be wrong, the law can be
unjust.
Your Honour, many have
proposed that one may voice opposition to abortion by means other than by
breaking the law. We agree with this point. However, opposing abortion was not
our sole intention. We must do more than that.
We believe that we are to
live in such a way that we serve our Creator, and we do so by serving His
creatures, our fellow brothers and sisters. We believe that you, Your Honour,
were created at the moment of conception, and that you are a unique being of
infinite worth. We believe the tiniest of human beings has been made in the
image of our Creator, is more precious than any thing, and must be respected.
This belief must be lived.
In our hearts, it has become clear that we will go, by God's grace, to the
places where our brothers and sisters are at risk of being killed, intervening
for them by whatever peaceful means we can.
By such direct
intervention, some might think that we are being disrespectful, or behaving
unjustly towards mothers, fathers, abortionists or associates who are present.
However, someone once made the astute remark that, "An injustice anywhere
is an injustice everywhere." When there is injustice towards a tiny child
not yet born, there is injustice towards her mother, father and, ultimately
towards each one of us.
Treating a tiny child justly does not deny justice for others. Justice, by its nature, is incapable of breeding injustice.
Thank you Your Honour,
The fruit of silence is prayer.
The fruit of prayer is faith.
The fruit of faith is love.
The fruit of love is service.
The fruit of service is peace.
Mary Wagner and Glenn Reed