Pro-choice author interviews abortion providers, reveals horror of abortion
By Sarah Terzo
Live Action contributor Lauren Enriquez wrote an article a week ago about pro-choice author Magda Denes. Denes, who survived Nazi Germany, held on to a pro-choice viewpoint even when confronted with the horrors of abortion while researching her book, In Necessity and Sorrow: Life and Death in an Abortion Hospital. Her book, though written many years ago, reveals some basic truths about abortion. Here are some quotes from the book that illustrate key points.
Abortion takes lives
Denes quotes three different abortion doctors.One says:
When you do a D & C most of
the tissue is removed by the Olden forceps or ring clamp and you
actually get gross parts of the fetus out. So you can see a miniature
person so to speak, and even now I occasionally feel a little peculiar
about it because as a physician I’m trained to conserve life and here I
am destroying life.
Another says:
In the beginning I was mixed up because I was taught by the Hippocratic Oath not to take a life.
And a third:
It [abortion] goes against all things which are natural. It’s a termination of a life, however you look at it.
“Babies” are killed
A clinic worker says:
A lot of people say they’re
killing their baby. You get a lot of that. Some people afterwards get
very upset and say ‘I killed my baby.’ Or even before, they say ‘My
circumstances are such that I can’t keep it, but I’m killing my baby.’
They wouldn’t rather have the baby, and give it up for adoption either.
If you go into that with them they will say that they could never do
that…and yet they still consider it killing the baby…well, they are
killing a baby. I mean, they are killing something that would develop
into maturity…
Doctors know it’s murder
Denes was interviewed in a newspaper about her book and said:
There wasn’t a doctor, who at one time or another in the questioning did not say, “This is murder.” (Daily News [Chicago] October 22, 1976, Quoted in Abortion: The Silent Holocaust by John Powell, S.J. p 67)
Abortion is profitable
So Denes, although she was pro-choice, documented how abortion providers in one busy abortion clinic all acknowledge that they are in the business of taking lives. Why do they do it? One doctor gives a reason:
It’s not a purely altruistic ….
The money that’s involved is also a big factor in why to do this. And I
think that most doctors who do abortions also do them for the money’s
sake. It’s a big motive, and certainly it’s nothing to be hypocritical
about.
Another doctor says:
I practice medicine not to make a
living and yet I like to make money at it. We made a lot of money in
abortions. ….. For the first two or three months I didn’t do any of the
abortions… Then I suddenly realized I had all the headaches because
whenever they ran into trouble I got involved. I took over gradually and
work two days a week and I found that I work very hard, but it made an
awful lot of money.
And some abortionists think women aren’t deserving of respect
One doctor says:
The patients are subservient to
us, and when they rebel it’s very simple: Go to somebody else….What
better relationship can a man have with a woman? …
Clinic workers sometimes criticize the doctors:
I really feel that about several
of the doctors. That there’s really pathological things and their
involvement with abortion. Like Dr. Roderigo. [pseudonym] He is very
sarcastic and he really, you know, like goes after people. Recently he
had a horrendous fight with Rachel [another clinic worker]. It was
absolutely, totally disgraceful. It happened right in the nurse’s
station. He flew at her. Cursing, screaming out loud, yelling, you could
hear it all over the whole floor. It was incredible, I mean, imagine
the kind of feeling that gives the patients on the floor. He was just
out after her and it had to do with her being a woman, in her position,
kind of…”
And reveal a lack of concern about patient care:
Our surgeons have a technique,
even though I shouldn’t really say this, where they don’t really scrub
between cases. They’ll scrub once and they’ll do a case and they’ll go
next door to the next room and put on a new gown and gloves. Without
scrubbing between.
Clinic workers silence their consciences
Clinic workers describe how they have hardened themselves to the death of the babies:
I’m not one to see blood and mess
and things like that. But I have since gotten so excited about it that I
thought about going back to nursing school. When you think about it on a
certain level, it’s a really interesting thing that is happening. It’s
fascinating, when you can think about it clinically and not get involved
in the people, or the babies. What happened when I was first working
here was that I just thought about the baby and that was very upsetting.
I’m very pro-abortion… several times I saw really beautiful things
happen, I mean it’s physically beautiful… Sometimes you can see the
vagina opening up in the entire thing coming at once.
Another says:
[Abortion] hasn’t had any effect
on me at all. …. I don’t know if it’s because I’m a male, but when I
leave here I don’t feel worried, as if I’ve done something wrong. It’s
like any other type of surgery, I just consider it a job. I once did say
to myself, “Gee, suppose I’d one day have a dream and see thousands of
fetuses running after me.” ….I feel funny sometimes taking on a fetus by
D&C even, when you can see the heart beating. Even with D&C’s
you get these feelings that you are doing something wrong. Especially
when you see arms and legs coming out. It comes out in so many pieces.
We had nurses that couldn’t adjust to this type of work. Many of them
quit.”
She watches clinic workers looking through the remains of an aborted child for a lost ring, barely noticing the horror of it.
Sensibility is blunted through
exposure. After weeks of trailing Holzman [an abortionist] from OR 1 to
OR 2, my sense of meaning dulls. I begin to see “cases,” “cervical
apertures,” “fetal tissue.”… One time the circulating nurse loses her
wedding ring during surgery. She discovers the loss at the end of the
operation as the orderly is about the fold the bloodied sheets on the
floor. She takes the filled plastic bag from the wastebasket and empties
it into the middle of the sheets. Both kneel and with their bare hands
rummage frantically in the pile of placental tissue and blood and body
parts. “It has to be here,” she says nearly in tears. “We’ll find it,”
he reassures her. I am all for them. Is frightful to lose one’s wedding
ring.… Hours later, when the scene reasserts itself in my mind, I do not
recognize myself.
… Several of us sit in the
cafeteria around a luncheon table, eating overdone, tasteless stew.
“What do you think this is made of?” Someone asks. “Venison,” I say.
“Pigeon,” says Betsy. “Don’t be silly,” says one of the counselors
“there is a hell of a lot cheaper meat to be found around here.” All of
us laugh, guffaw, splutter, and slap each other on the arms. It is the
funniest thing we have heard in years… “Get a hold of yourself, ladies,”
Rachel says. “This is unseemly.” She is right, of course, but all of us
laugh again. “I think it’s a Greek dish,” says Teresa, laughing so hard
that tears begin to roll down her face and we can barely understand
her. “It’s fetustu.” There is no containing any of us now. “There is
mincemeat pie for dessert,” someone shouts. “And that isn’t tomato juice
you’re drinking, ” adds somebody else. Most of us are doubled over. The
air is filled with the shrieks, and gasps, and gurgles. My sides begin
to ache.”
Editor’s note. This appeared at liveactionnews.org.
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