The Pope has now intervened in the Irish abortion debate, making it clear that the church is deeply unhappy at efforts to change abortion law in Ireland.
Vatican watchers had no doubt that Benedict was firing a warning shot at Ireland specifically with his latest remarks, and that they will surely have an impact. Abortion is a tangled, difficult issue in Ireland as it is indeed everywhere else in the world.
Essentially, for decades Ireland could sweep the abortion issue under the carpet as Irish women went to England in large numbers (and still do) -- over 5,000 a year for abortions – and they were only the ones who gave Irish addresses.
Then came the X case when an underage girl made pregnant through a rape by a relative was refused permission to travel to England by a court which held that she would be committing a criminal act if the baby were aborted.
Read more: Irish Bishops accused of hating women by top female politician during abortion hearings
The girl was suicidal, doctors agreed. That led to the usual hue and cry in Ireland with every side launching hysterical attacks on the other.
Calm, rational debate on this issue will not be found in Ireland, or indeed anywhere. Essentially the upshot of the X case was a later Supreme Court ruling that Ireland needed to get it house in order and legislate so an X type of case could not happen again.
The Supreme Court case established the right of Irish women to an abortion if a pregnant woman's life was at risk because of pregnancy, including the risk of suicide. They said the government must legislate as such.
Of course that legislation has never occurred as Irish politicians, as is their wont, avoided the issue like the plague, despite a European Court ruling that they had to legislate.
The issue simmered away until the latest explosion when an Indian national, Savita Halappanavar, was allegedly told her dying fetus could not be aborted until her heartbeat stopped.
Mother and baby died, leading to hue and cry the length of the country, and the politicians finally made the move to safeguard the life of the mother.
Or did they?
The church has acted strongly, attacking the new legislation now proposed as opening the door for abortion in Ireland.
Read more: Catholic Church calls on Irish government to hold abortion referendum
It is really no such thing. The political profession is merely forced to address an issue that they would prefer to forget about.
The church’s standing in all this, given their recent troubles in Ireland, is also uncertain, but they are all in trying to prevent the new abortion legislation.
Time was if the church opposed the politician dutifully deferred. That day is gone, and the battle will be joined in the coming months.
A leading church figure recently felt it necessary to note that Catholics in Ireland who used contraceptives (about 98 percent) were still in reasonable good standing, which was big of him. That nugget points up much of what is wrong in church/state relationships in Ireland today.
The reality is that tragedies will continue to occur until the messy business of what happens in life, such as rape by family members, no termination of fatally ill fetuses, etc., is given a correct legislative framework.
The politicians need to grasp this nettle in Ireland once and for all, despite the criticism. It is the only way to protect the women who find themselves in such horrific circumstances.
4 Comments
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Switch to the desktop site to post a comment.MichaelMcGrath | Feb 02, 2013, 12:58 AM EST
WRONG, Nicolletta! Here in Ireland there have always been more women than men in the anti-abortion campaign but there are many more men than women in the pro-abortion camp! And I don't think we irish can be blamed because we do not want to have to change our country's abortion laws to suit immigrants. The Savita death was sad, but she and her husband were wealthy enough to fly to the UK, say Liverpool nearby, for an abortion, they could surely have afforded the fair and the national Health both in the UK and ireland is free.
Seanmor | Jan 20, 2013, 11:27 AM EST
In addition to women fron the Irish state who cross the sea to G.B. for abortions, some females from north of the Border also take the same route to kill their unborn babies. Understantably there were extenuating circumstances in which the court in Dublin allowed the abortion. (The Anne Lovett case lso comes to mind). But that does NOT mean that the Dáil should pass laws that make abortion-on-demand available to every pregant woman in the state. In the late '70s I took college courses, including biology, under the G.I. Bill. The biology book stated : "Life begins at the monent of conception", and I got an "A" in the course. Should that grade now be reduced to a "B" or a "C"?
Nicoletta | Jan 12, 2013, 02:25 AM EST
Notice the many men in the pro-abort picture above. Previous demos show an overwhelming majority of women. Speaks volumes doesn't it?
eiriamach | Jan 11, 2013, 10:16 AM EST
Savita's body was battling sepsis, but doctors would not abort the fetus until its heart stopped beating. This delay was so strange that I can only imagine it deriving from superstition! I've no medical degree, but in my college physiology course, I was required to remove the heart from a laboratory frog. I recall how amazed we students were as that heart, lying isolated in saline solution, continued to beat on and on. The heart is a mechanical pump that may continue working even after the body it belonged to is dead. A friend was driving when a bird flew into his side-view mirror and shredded itself, leaving only its heart intact and caught on the mirror arm. "Macabre" he called the incident as he drove all the way home with that bright red bird heart still beating away inches from his eyes. A pregnant woman slips into a coma and dies while doctors listen to the heartbeat of her fetus, which they know they cannot save, while they neglect to save the life they can save. Macabre!