|
Amnesty International Rejects Church
Support Withdrawn Over Pro-Abortion Policy
BY TOM MCFEELY CONTRIBUTING EDITOR September 2-8, 2007 Issue |
Posted 8/29/07 at 10:10 AM
LONDON — In the wake of Amnesty International’s formal
confirmation of a new pro-abortion policy, Catholics are mobilizing to find
other human-rights organizations to support instead.
And Jesuit Father Chris Middleton, headmaster of St.
Aloysius’ College in Sydney, Australia, is blazing the trail: The Amnesty
International (AI) club at his school has been disbanded and replaced with a
new Benenson Society, named after the Catholic layman who founded Amnesty
International in the 1960s.
“At its meeting last week, Amnesty confirmed that it was
abandoning its long-held policy of neutrality on abortion,” Father Middleton
said in a statement posted on the Internet. “This means that the college and
many other schools, I believe, will no longer support Amnesty groups.”
In mid-August, Amnesty International announced that
delegates at its International Council Meeting in Mexico City had affirmed the
organization’s new abortion policy.
According to a statement posted Aug. 17 on the
organization’s website, “With the prevention of violence against women as its
major campaigning focus, Amnesty International’s leaders committed themselves
anew to work for universal respect for sexual and reproductive rights.”
According to the Aug. 17 statement, Amnesty International’s
pro-abortion policy commits the group “to support the decriminalization of
abortion, to ensure women have access to health care when complications arise
from abortion and to defend women’s access to abortion, within reasonable
gestational limits, when their health or human rights are in danger.”
Vatican Response
The pro-abortion policy, which replaces the group’s previous
position of neutrality, was instituted in April by Amnesty International’s
executive board.
Cardinal Renato Martino, president of the Pontifical Council
of Justice and Peace, condemned the new policy in an exclusive interview with
the Register in early June.
“I believe that, if in fact Amnesty International persists
in this course of action, individuals and Catholic organizations must withdraw
their support; because, in deciding to promote abortion rights, AI has betrayed
its mission,” Cardinal Martino said.
Cardinal Martino was not available for comment in the week
after Amnesty International ratified its pro-abortion policy. But the move was
denounced by another senior Vatican official, Secretary of State Cardinal
Tarcisio Bertone.
Speaking on Vatican Radio Aug. 20, Cardinal Bertone rejected
Amnesty International’s argument that sexual violence against women justifies
access to abortion.
“Violence cannot be answered with further violence; murder
with murder; for even if the child is unborn, it is still a human person,”
Cardinal Bertone said. “It has a right to dignity as a human being.”
Amnesty International did not reply to questions submitted
from the Register via e-mail about its decision to institute the new abortion
policy.
Another prominent Church leader, Bishop Michael Evans of
East Anglia, England, announced that he was resigning from Amnesty
International because of the pro-abortion policy.
Bishop Evans was an Amnesty member for 31 years and is a
former chairman of the Religious Bodies Liaison Panel of Amnesty International’s
British Section Council. He is also the author of a prayer the organization
used in a recent “Protect the Human” campaign.
“The Catholic Church shares Amnesty’s strong commitment to
oppose violence against women (for example, rape, sexual assault and incest),
but such appalling violence must not be answered by violence against the most
vulnerable and defenseless form of human life in a woman’s womb,” Bishop Evans
said in an Aug. 18 statement posted on the website of the bishops’ conference
of England and Wales.
“Catholics would want to show practical compassion for such
women, and ensure for them all the medical and spiritual care and support they
need,” the bishop continued. “But there is no human right to access to
abortion, and Amnesty should not involve itself even in such extreme cases.”
Bishop Evans also noted that Amnesty International was
disregarding the rights of unborn children, which are recognized in the
Preamble of the U.N. Convention on the Rights of Child. It states that “the
child, by reason of his or her physical and mental immaturity, needs special
safeguards and care, including appropriate legal protection, before as well as
after birth.”
Said Bishop Evans, “This must surely be part of the body of
international human rights law to which Amnesty International is committed.”
Bishop Skylstad
In early July, Bishop William Skylstad of Spokane, Wash.,
president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, said in a statement that
Amnesty International should not adopt the new abortion policy.
Bishop Skylstad noted that Amnesty International’s abortion
policy used the same language that has allowed on-demand abortion in many parts
of the United States.
“AI’s new policy appears to apply to every stage of
pregnancy and has already led AI-USA to oppose laws against the killing of
partially-delivered children,” Bishop Skylstad said. “Similarly, the policy of
advancing access to abortion to preserve women’s ‘health,’ a word left
undefined by AI, has not confined the practice to narrow circumstances, but in
American law has led to abortion on demand.”
In an Aug. 23 statement, Bishop Skylstad condemned Amnesty
International’s confirmation of its abortion policy.
“Amnesty International’s action will lead many people of
conscience to seek alternative means to end grave human rights abuses, fight
injustice, and promote freedom of conscience and expression,” Bishop Skylstad
said.
“The essential work of protecting human life and promoting
human dignity must carry on,” the bishop said. “But we will seek to do so in
authentic ways, working most closely with organizations who do not oppose the
fundamental right to life from conception to natural death.”
Alternatives
With Catholic leaders calling for withdrawal of support of
Amnesty International, alternative means are being proposed of supporting
human-rights issues in which Amnesty International has been involved.
In the United States, the Cardinal Newman Society has urged
Catholic universities to disband campus Amnesty International chapters.
According to the society, more than 50 colleges and law schools have such
chapters.
Australian Jesuit educator Father Middleton’s Benenson
Society could serve as a model for American Catholic schools that are seeking
to replace their own Amnesty International chapters.
“We will establish a society here at the college that will
allow our students to continue to have an involvement in the promotion of human
rights through the raising of awareness of violations of these rights and
through lobbying of governments for prisoners of conscience, the end of torture
and the death penalty, and the rights of all to basic freedoms,” Father
Middleton said in his Internet statement. “The society will not be a
specifically religious or Catholic body, and will maintain a policy of neutrality
on abortion.”
Added Father Middleton, “The society will be called the
Benenson Society, after Peter Benenson, the Catholic lawyer who founded
Amnesty, and will hopefully embody something of the spirituality, as well as
idealism, that led to the formation of Amnesty.”
Jesuit Father Thomas King, a Georgetown University theology
professor and a former president of University Faculty for Life, said the
creation of groups like the Benenson Society is an appropriate reaction to
Amnesty International’s decision to adopt a pro-abortion stance.
“I think that would be a very good response, if somebody
could get that organized and get it active,” said Father King, a longtime
Amnesty International supporter who served in the 1980s as faculty adviser to
Georgetown’s Amnesty International chapter.
Father King doesn’t believe Amnesty International’s claims
to have been motivated by the issue of sexual violence against women when it
abandoned its neutral position on abortion. Instead, the organization succumbed
to lobbying from abortion activists and will regret having done so, he
predicted.
“People who support so-called ‘abortion rights’ are probably
very pleased and feel they’ve scored another ‘coup,’” Father King said. “But I
think it is going to leave Amnesty International with a very questionable
reputation from now on.”
Tom McFeely is based in
Victoria, British Columbia.
Make a Donation now!
Insightful. Informative. Uncompromisingly faithful. The National Catholic Register is more than a newspaper. It’s a cause. Your support for the Register funds important journalism that helps to build a Culture of Life in our nation, and throughout the world. Help us promote the Church’s New Evangelization by donating to the National Catholic Register right now.
Click here to donate
|