No, I am not predicting a stock market crash tomorrow. The black colour stands for solidarity with thousands (if not millions) of Polish women who are about to go on an all-out strike tomorrow, a protest akin to the one staged by females in Iceland in 1975, when a one-day walkout virtually paralysed the small country, yet has gone down in the history as a day when women successfully called out for their rights.
The
initiative of the strike in Poland is the reaction to a proposal of tightening
the already restrictive (by European standards) abortion law, i.e. banning the
abortion at all, regardless of circumstances. The widespread voice of objection
is similar to many Pole’s reaction to PiS (unfortunately successful) attempts
to tamper with constitutional tribunal nearly a year ago. Yet, while
independence of judiciary power and separation of three powers is an issue far
in the background for an ordinary citizen, changes to the abortion law may have
tremendous impact on lives of several families.
The current
abortion so-called compromise allows for abortion in three general situations:
when a pregnancy is an aftermath of rape, when life of a future mother is in
danger or when a child is bound to be born incurably ill, disabled, handicapped
or dead. Recently the parliament received two draft laws, drawn up by civic
movements. One, putting forward liberalising access to abortion, has been
turned down right away, while the other, submitted by ultra-pro-life activists,
prohibiting abortion at all, has been pressed ahead to further proceedings.
PiS, seeing
Poles’ approach to ban on abortion (nearly 50% of the surveyed are in favour of
retaining the status-quo “compromise, around one-fourth would liberalise the
abortion law, while slightly less than 20% would forbid it all) and bearing in
mind the draft law is not their own, is going go back down and ease off some
the most brutal provisions of the pro-life’s proposal, but the abortion law in
its new shape will very likely be more restrictive in than today’s wording. The
outcome is predictable – we will see more gynaecologists’ offices in basements
offering “triggering menstruation” and more women will travel to Czech Republic
and Germany to terminate pregnancies.
I hope the
purport of the protest will be broader than standing out against tightening the
abortion law. The strike in Iceland is reported to have brought the country’s
society closer to partnership model of marriage / relationship. Although there
has been improvement in Poland in this respect, many Polish men still need to
be reminded traditional division of rules ought not to be imposed on women.
Raising children and running the house and the accompanying obligations should
be shared more or less equally among spouses, unless they both agree on a
different apportioning of roles. The problem in Poland is still that a man who
returns home from work is tired enough to lie back on a sofa, sip beer and
watch TV, while a woman starts her second unpaid job, namely cooking, washing
up, cleaning up, ironing, doing homework with children etc.
Tomorrow in
the office I am standing in for a female colleague who is going to take a day
off on demand, therefore I will co-ordinate a regular bi-weekly committee.
Besides, I have offered to stand in for any woman willing not to turn up to the
office. Though actually I do not expect the scale of the protest at the New
Factory to be impressive, as in any private corporation where political views
are hardly ever flaunted.
To make it
clear, just like any human of sound mind, I am not in favour of abortion.
Pregnancy termination is always an evil, but in situations in which I believe
it is justified, especially those in which it is currently permitted, it is a
lesser of two or more evils. Nonetheless, I am supportive of whatever can be
done to avoid abortions which are often a result of unwanted pregnancies.
Consequently, I am rooting for unbiased sexual education in schools, including
familiarising youngsters with contraception. I am also calling for access to morning-after
pills (which I believe is a late contraception method).
The
discussion on abortion is not just about facts but about beliefs. If I am
convinced a bunch of cells which might develop into an embryo, than into a
foetus and be born, is not yet a human being, but just a bench of cells, my
approach to abortion is pro-choice. Pro-life activists believe a zygote is
already a human being, therefore a natural implication of their reasoning is
that even taking a morning-after pill is a murder. The current abortion
compromise rests on the foundation that pregnancy cannot be terminated at the
stage when a foetus can survive (aided by medial devices or not) out of
mother’s womb, this borderline moment is the 24th week of pregnancy.
Some people
believe killing animals in order to eat their meat is an atrocity and therefore
become vegetarians. Some people believe pregnancy must not be terminated, no
matter of circumstances. I am of the opinion in situations when abortion is
permitted by law, doctors should present it to their patients as one of two
options and not encourage a woman neither to carry the child until birth nor to
terminate the pregnancy. It is a matter of patients’ consciences and beliefs,
so give them the choice!
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