FEMINIST PRO LIFE
Pro-Life Feminist: Not a Contradiction in Terms
Washington, DC -- As the president of Feminists for Life of America, Serrin Foster is working to enlighten women about consequences of abortion and to supply alternatives.
Feminists
for Life of America was founded in 1972 by women who resisted approval of
abortion by the National Organization for Women (NOW) and other feminist groups.
These rebel feminists believed that women could support feminist goals such as
greater employment opportunities without embracing abortion on demand.
Instead,
NOW kicked them out.
Reorganized
in the mid-1990s, Feminists for Life now has 5,000 members nationwide. Serrin
Foster, the group's friendly and outspoken president, likes to compare the
impact it delivers despite its small size to that of a SWAT team.
Foster
points out that great early American feminists such as Susan B. Anthony and
Elizabeth Cady Stanton were deeply anti-abortion, which makes American
feminism's relationship with prolife convictions a very long one indeed.
Foster
speaks regularly at college campuses across the country. She's spoken at Harvard
and Stanford universities, where her audiences have been largely hostile. She's
also talked at Cambridge and Oxford universities.
Almost
everywhere, though, people are willing to hear her message about why women
should try to preserve life She speaks compassionately on college campuses,
focusing on where pregnant women can go to get help and support to keep their
children at a time when a lack of funds and a fear of dropping out of school
might seem to point to abortion as the only solution.
The
following is an interview with her:
Question:
How did you happen to join up with Feminists for Life?
Serrin
Foster: In 1994, when I was director of development for the National Alliance
for the Mentally Ill, I came across an ad looking for somebody who was prowoman
and pro-life. Since the 1970s, when I was in college, young women had been told
over and over again that we couldn't be both, that we must choose between women
and children.
When I saw
that advertisement, my first and immediate reaction was that I had to do this. I
took an enormous pay cut because I knew this was where my heart is. I knew this
organization was right for me. So on 4/4/94, I moved to Feminists for Life.
Question:
What do you mean you knew the group was right for you?
SF: When I
was in college, the Equal Rights Amendment [ERA] suddenly was very big. I was so
excited: I had been raised with the idea that women could be only certain
things: a secretary, a teacher, a nurse, a waitress, a stewardess. Or you could
go straight to momhood. But the ERA said you could do anything! It was
revolutionary, and it was very appealing!
As
everyone was talking about the ERA, the word "abortion" began to
appear in the discussions. I was sitting there listening to all the rhetoric
about feminism-- how it was supposed to be based on nondiscrimination,
nonviolence and justice for all. But I thought abortion violates each of these
basic feminist tenets: It's violent, it's discriminatory and it certainly isn't
justice for the unborn child.
More
important, I had heard of so many girlfriends having abortions now that it was
legal, and I knew how painful it was for them. The revolution was hurting women,
and abortion in particular was hurting women. Women started saying, "I can
do everything," and men said: "Okay, it's your body, it's your choice.
It's your problem."
Oh, there
were good things that were coming out of the rise of feminism: the opportunity
for women to work in different and nontraditional jobs, for example. But I felt
very alone in my pro- life and pro-woman convictions. I knew I was a pro-life
feminist, but I absolutely refused to choose between women and children.
Question:
You must have felt alone.
SF: I
would get angry looking at bumper stickers on people's cars! I would get angry
at the way the whole debate was being twisted in the media so that if you were
antiabortion you were antiwoman. I knew that was absolutely not true. I got
especially mad watching members of Congress getting bullied by women who were
saying, "Oh you don't understand what it's like to be pregnant. You don't
understand what it means to be a woman."
And I kept
thinking, "We're feminists; we're supposed to be problem-solvers; we're
supposed to figure out solutions in which women don't have to be drawn into
violence." And nobody was talking about how devastating abortion is to
women.
Question:
What has Feminists for Life been focusing on under your leadership?
SF: We
realized that the women in Feminists for Life are well- educated, and we
recognized that we had access to college women, who are at the highest risk for
abortion in this society.
A 1997
Gallup poll underlined the importance of reaching college- age women. It showed
that the influence higher education had on opinions and attitudes about abortion
was extraordinary and revolutionary. When men go to college they don't change
their opinion about abortion, although overall they are more for abortion than
women. But women, when they graduate from high school, are more against abortion
than they are for it. By the time they are graduated from a four-year
institution, however, three out of four women support abortion.
It breaks
down like this: When they enter college, 37 percent support abortion and 56
percent oppose it. Four years later, 73 percent support abortion. It's that much
of an increase.
Question:
So college campuses are the logical place for Feminists for Life to focus its
attention. What do you say when you make one of your speeches to students?
SF: One of
the things you want to convey to women is that pregnancy is not the end of life
but the beginning.
A woman
gets pregnant while in college and breaks up with her boyfriend. She knows that
she doesn't believe in abortion, so she asks herself, "How can I keep this
child?" She looks around her college and sees that it's putting up lots of
buildings, but none are housing for pregnant women. She looks into day care and
sees it costs $6,000 a year - too much for her to pay and stay in school. She
reads the health-insurance policy provided by student health care and finds
there is no maternity coverage.
So we have
started working with colleges to seek a supportive environment for pregnant
women who do not want an abortion. We say, "Let's talk about the options
she has: marriage, single-parenthood, adoption. And let's think about the
resources that are available on campus and off campus, too, that would help her
and reinforce her choice against abortion."
Question:
Have you had some success along these lines?
SF: We
started a pilot program at Georgetown University, doing the education and
philosophy side of being pro-woman and pro-life, but also looking at the
resources available to pregnant women. It was astounding to me. Within only two
years they had a day-care center called Hoyas for Kids. The university got
someone who had been working part time on violence against women to work full
time on that plus pregnancy counseling.
They also
have a beeper service and, if a woman is having a crisis in the middle of the
night or on a weekend because she has discovered she is pregnant, she can locate
somebody to talk to immediately. Georgetown set aside four of its town houses,
endowed properties, for pregnant and parenting students.
There was
another big change on campus. There now are many kids having kids while they're
still in high school, and when they go to college they're hiding their children
from their peers. But students on campus have now started saying, "I'm a
mom."
Question:
You've spoken before students at Harvard and Stanford and other places where
radical feminism is rampant. It must be be quite an experience.
SF: At
Swarthmore College I walked into one ofthose big lounges with chairs set up as
for a lecture. There were four pro-life students on that campus who had
organized the meeting and brought me in to address it. I walked into that room
and was met by many very angry faces, as though I were there to ruin their
lives.
They must
have seen me as if I were a member ofthe KKK [Ku Klux Klan] walking into an
NAACP [National Association for the Advancement of Colored People] meeting. But,
except for one person, they all stayed to hear me out. Afterward students came
up and said they agreed with about 98 percent of what I had said. But the front
page of the student paper the next day blared: "First Pro-Life Speaker in
Five Years." Such a situation, especially where life-and-death decisions
are being made, is shameful.
Question:
Do you think most women will opt to keep their child if they see they can handle
the situationand not drop out of school?
SF: Once
she is pregnant, we need to address her needs. I still don't know any woman who
wants an abortion. There may be women who didn't want to get pregnant in the
first place, but who would wish an abortion on even their worst enemy? When a
woman knows she's pregnant, she's forever changed; she's forever connected with
this kid. An abortion will never undo that child's impact on her life any more
than a miscarriage would.
For more
information on the organization, visit http://www.feministsforlife.org