Poland’s Coat Hanger Rebellion Against a New Anti-Abortion Law
Poland’s Coat Hanger Rebellion Against a New
Anti-Abortion Law
By: Christian Borys
Taken From: The Daily Beast
When
Catholic priests issued decrees during morning mass last Sunday calling for the
country to institute a complete ban on abortions, Poland erupted in protests.
The initiative was not unexpected, but
the surge of opposition caught many by surprise as men and women took to the streets waving wire coat
hangers, symbols of the deadly “back room” abortions that take place when all
legal means to terminate a pregnancy are exhausted.
The purpose
of the priests’ coordinated speeches was to launch a petition and gather
churchgoers’ signatures that could then be used to begin a legislative campaign
in the country’s parliament, the Sejm. A “pro-life” organization called
Fundacja Pro quickly gathered the required 1,000 signatures. But when the group
made its intentions known during the course of the previous week, many Poles
started organizing opposition on Facebook.
In just two
days, they drew together over 65,000 concerned activists and laid the
groundwork for Sunday’s protests, but stopping the momentum of the draconian
legislation is going to be a long, tough fight.
Current law
in Poland allows abortions only in three drastic situations: when the pregnancy
is a result of rape or incest; when the life of the pregnant woman is in
danger; or when the fetus is severely damaged. This is already one of the most
restrictive abortion laws in all of Europe, forcing many women to seek out
underground abortions or travel outside of Poland to countries like Slovakia.
But in the eyes of Poland’s Catholic Church, this policy is too lackadaisical.
The draft
of the new legislation was written by an organization called Ordo Iuris (Rule
of Law), whose stated aim is to “promote a legal culture based on respect for
human dignity and rights.” The draft was promptly endorsed by the Polish
Episcopal Conference, which acts as the central organ of the Catholic Church in
Poland. The conference’s widely disseminated notice on the new law explained
that it supports it because the 5th Commandment specifically states “Thou shalt
not kill,” and thus life must be protected from beginning—from the moment the
sperm fertilizes the egg—to its natural end.
The wording
of the law itself is simple but the implications are sweeping: “Every human
being has the inherent right to life from the moment of conception,” reads its
article I. “The life and health of the child from conception remain under
protection of the law."
On April 4,
the Polish television network TVN reported that the law would lead to prison
terms of up to three years for causing the death of a child once conceived. The
same would apply to anyone who assists with or encourages the termination.
Critics
looking at the possible legal ramifications were appalled. Pawel Kalisz of the
Polish website Natemat wrote that the wording of the law could include as
accomplices the woman or girl’s doctor; the friend driving her to the clinic;
the dad who wrote her the sick note for the day off from school; the friend who
brought her medication from abroad. Everyone.
Others
noted that, in theory at least, rape survivors and children will be forced to
give birth; women who might die due to their pregnancy will have no way to
terminate it legally; a miscarriage might be punished with a sentence, as fetal
murder will enter the criminal code;
Also, the
state will have the right to bypass a person’s constitutional rights in order
to protect unborn children; since prenatal testing is connected to a very small
risk of miscarriage, it will be banned and doctors performing it might face
criminal charges; and the morning-after pill will be categorized as an early
abortion tool and thus completely banned (as will IUDs).
As one
protester pointed out as well, women who discovered early on that their fetus
had zero chance of surviving the pregnancy would be forced to live with the
misery of carrying the baby for months and months until the inevitable
conclusion.
The
punishment would escalate to up to eight years of jail time for abortions
undertaken without the consent of the woman. Furthermore, prison sentences of
up to 10 years would be on the table for abortions undertaken while the fetus
has the capacity for life outside the womb.
There are
some loopholes, but they are narrow and unreliable. The draft law would not
make it a crime for a doctor to end the life of a conceived child during the
course of a procedure essential to saving the life of the mother. Furthermore,
in exceptional cases the court would be able to reduce the jail sentence of a
mother who had deliberately caused the death of a conceived child, or waive it
altogether.
Although
Polish values generally are Catholic and conservative, many Poles marched out
of mass on Sunday in disgust when priests read the decree. A video of a woman
openly admonishing her pastor went viral across the country. In it, the priest
interrupts the woman’s tirade to ask if she has finished with her “political
statement.” The irony of this remark was not lost on social media users, with
one woman commenting, “Well, yes, because in church, political statements can
only be made from the priest’s pulpit.”
The
country’s right-wing media, meanwhile, called these protests a provocation against
the state.
Although,
formally, nothing has yet been codified, the wheels of change have been put
into motion says Polish journalist Michał Szułdrzyński. “Now that Fundacja Pro
have done their initial signature gathering, they will take it to the Sejm, which
will verify the 1,000 signatures and then give the group three months to
collect another 100,000 signatures. If successful, this next step would force
the Sejm into taking a serious look.”
That’s not
nearly as difficult as it sounds.
In 2011, a
civic initiative to ban abortion gathered nearly 500,000 signatures and was
introduced into the Sejm. At that time however, the lower house was run by the
more left-leaning Civic Platform, which rejected the idea. When it was put to a
vote, the more liberal Civic Platform party held 208 seats while Law and
Justice (known by its Polish acronym PiS) controlled 157. The result of the
vote was 178 for and 206 against.
Now,
however, the PiS controls 235 seats against the Civic Platform party’s 157, and
has embarked on a systematic campaign to stifle and marginalize opposition. PiS
could pass the bill on its own, and it’s also got a parliamentary ally, with
the third biggest party Kukiz’15, run by musician turned right-wing populist
Pawel Kukiz. The Kukiz party holds 40 seats in Sejm, and its leader has also
been an outspoken opponent of abortion in the past. With these numbers, the
bill will almost assuredly pass.
All of this
poses a very real and terrifying prospect for women across the country who fear
that the coat hangers they’ve been holding as symbols of resistance might soon
become their only recourse against unwanted and unsafe births.



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