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- <text id=89TT1155>
- <title>
- May 01, 1989: "Save The Babies"
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- May 01, 1989 Abortion
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 26
- "Save the Babies"
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Operation Rescue: a case study in galvanizing the antiabortion
- movement
- </p>
- <p>By Garry Wills
- </p>
- <p> Anaheim, Calif.: Gray after little sleep, the uterine
- warriors gather in a parking lot across from Disneyland. The
- cars still have their lights on in the ambiguous dawn -- large
- cars and vans. The crusaders of Operation Rescue do not know
- where they are going, but they are prepared for long drives.
- Organizers line up the carloads to be given maps as thexy peel
- off out of the lot. Taut nerves make the leaders snappish as
- they scurry about, pausing in little clots of prayer, then
- bustling to their tasks. Their language is semimilitary,
- befitting such constant readers of the Book of Exodus. These
- a|re churchgoing, middle-class couples, uneasy in the shabby
- clothes they have put on for prison service later in the day.
- Not the demonstrators of civil rights or antiwar protests, these
- are a new breed: "Bible Christians" increasingly determined t}o
- restore their country to God.
- </p>
- <p> Targets are kept secret until the last minute, since
- Operation Rescue's tactic is to jam all entrances to an abortion
- clinic before the police can muster sufficient officers to begin
- arrests or before pro-choice activists can pre-empt the doorways
- and leave funnels for staff and patients to enter. Some clinics
- will close if they know they are going to be hit, so Operation
- Rescue has made appointments at a number of the clinics, relying
- on cancellations to tell them which targets are unavailable that
- day. The scouting of the sites has been thorough: there are
- diagrams of all points of entry and even Polaroid shots of the
- doorways, so the numbers needed to seal off each door can be
- apportioned.
- </p>
- <p> The pro-choice opposition has marshaled its resources in a
- military counter-image of the raiders. They have posted troops
- at the most likely target clinics and kept others mobile in
- cars, with walkie-talkies to summon them as soon as the protest
- site becomes apparent from the route of the Operation Rescue
- caravan. An elaborate game of feints and reciprocal infiltration
- is going forward. Before this morning's caravan can even get
- started, the pro-choice side seems to have checkmated the game
- with a single move: both ends of the street off the parking lot
- have been blocked at the last minute with a line of pro-choice
- cars.
- </p>
- <p> Randall Terry, the pro-lifers' flamboyant orator, 29 and
- impulsive, wants to start moving the caravan before further
- layers of obstruction can be brought into place. He says enough
- men can just lift the few blockading cars out of the way. But
- Jeff White, two years Terry's senior and in charge of today's
- operation, brushes past him to form a little circle of his
- friends and pray. Praying out loud is the first response to any
- setback for this group. (Terry often interjects, in the middle
- of conversation in a normal tone, a groaned "Jesus help us.")
- The prayer does not deliver a plan, but at least it slows down
- response. By then police cars are clearing away the roadblocks.
- After all, the cops' assignment today is to keep people from
- obstructing access. The pro-choice maneuver, though it fails,
- has bought time for its side; the pro-lifers move out late,
- attended by the pro-choicers, who have turned their blockading
- cars into moving observation posts along the flank of the
- caravan, signaling by radio the course that is being set.
- </p>
- <p> The clinic is only a short ride away, in Cypress. Before
- the cars reach the site, 30 pro-choicers are already protecting
- one of the eight doors to the building and reinforcements are
- arriving. Some pro-lifers leap out of their cars and streak
- toward the seven unguarded doors. The leaders call them back and
- regroup across the street. The troops have been instructed not
- to move on their own; there is safety (and nonviolence) in
- solidarity. The first task is to seal in the 30 pro-choicers
- with superior numbers, to wedge them in at the door ("making
- them help us save the babies"). The other doorways will be
- filled up, in an orderly way, as the caravan parks in nearby
- spaces.
- </p>
- <p> Conveniently, the small Cypress police station is just
- across the street. Negotiations can immediately be opened with
- the authorities. Joseph Foreman, 34, is the Operation Rescue
- man delegated to police relations this day. He informs the
- police of the group's intention to block the doors and asks what
- charges will be brought against them, what procedures followed.
- The "rescuers" go limp, so that it takes four police officers
- to carry off one demonstrator, but the means of entry into
- arrest vans is always negotiable. Foreman agrees to have his
- people walk onto the buses: "I hate to have them carried on;
- someone always gets hurt." But when Foreman tells Terry of the
- arrangements, Terry sends him back to get assurances that the
- police will not arrest at too great a speed in exchange for the
- walk-on. It is the kind of change in terms that makes the police
- distrustful of Operation Rescue, and Foreman is clearly unhappy
- at this infringement of his on-site authority.
- </p>
- <p> Some 700 pro-lifers at the clinic are divided into three
- main groups: the rescuers jammed in the doorways; authorized
- "sidewalk counselors," who tell any arriving patient that she
- can discuss a way to keep her baby at a nearby "crisis pregnancy
- center"; and "prayer supporters," who are asked to sing hymns
- and observe the police. Each group has its own marshal
- instructing it, without bullhorns if possible, and no one in the
- three groups is supposed to talk to anyone -- police, press or
- hecklers. Most observe the discipline, but the prayer supporters
- are the least predictable. They are sympathizers who do not mean
- to go to jail, but they often get carried away because of the
- hecklers or the sight of their friends being arrested. At every
- rally they are told not to get into arguments. Mike McMonagle,
- the only Roman Catholic in the leadership of Operation Rescue,
- tells them the night before: "If you shout even something as
- unthreatening as `We will help you' to an arriving mother, the
- sound of 30 voices shouting that does not say what you mean it
- to say. Leave that to the sidewalk counselors, who are trained
- at persuasion." Prayer supporters would be more of a nuisance
- than a help if so many of them did not decide, on seeing their
- comrades arrested, to fill in the emptied places in front of the
- doors. In almost every case, mo~re people go to jail than had
- intended to.
- </p>
- <p> The tactic of the rescuers, consciously drawn from the
- nonviolent techniques of Gandhi and Martin Luther King Jr., is
- to knead themselves so densely in around the doors that no one
- can thread a way through the inert resisting bodies. Rescuers
- are not supposed to push or shove, and they are told not to
- bring poster sticks or umbrellas that they might be tempted to
- use as barriers. If the mass is penetrated, it is supposed to
- ooze back out and around the rift, enclosing it in a new
- carapace of seated bodies. They move in a human sludge, on their
- knees, not standing, to make confrontation possible.
- </p>
- <p> Pro-choice protesters ring the pro-lifers, trying to cover
- them up with placards, so that the TV cameras register support
- for the clinics. The pro-choicers chant and demand the arrest
- of the pro-lifers: "Read 'em their rights, and take 'em away."
- Each group has its grisly signs -- aborted fetuses on one side,
- women's corpses bloody from illegal abortions on the other. It
- is a noisy scene, hymns vs. chanted slogans, with both sides
- resorting to bullhorns to get above the din (and the police
- finally adding their loudspeakers). The task of the police is
- first to detach the two groups, ordering those who do not wish
- to be arrested to move away. That brings all but the most
- embedded pro-choicers out of the milling near the doors. Then
- the arrests begin -- 373 of them in Cypress on the Thursday
- before Easter.
- </p>
- <p> On the Friday before Easter, the rescuers showed up in Long
- Beach, where the police are under a shadow of alleged
- brutality. Officers were especially polite, clearing some paths
- but making no arrests. The clinic closed down. On the day before
- Easter, in Los Angeles, 725 arrests were made in a pelting rain
- that turned the rescuers into sodden clumps. Most of those
- arrested remained in jail over Easter, refusing to give their
- names or be released until felony charges were dropped against
- four of their leaders (including Terry). There have been
- hundreds of such local actions, with thousands of arrests, in
- the year since this new wave of activism began gathering
- momentum.
- </p>
- <p> Where did these respectable law-breakers come from all of
- a sudden? Randall Terry is this year's most obvious symbol of
- the right-to-life movement. An ordained preacher who physically
- resembles former boy evangelist Marjoe Gortner, Terry dropped
- out of high school, had a "conversion experience," then went to
- Elim Bible Institute in Lima, N.Y. He started picketing
- abortion clinics, along with his wife, in 1984 while working for
- a car salesman. Before Terry came along there had been large
- lobbying and education groups in the field for decades -- the
- National Right to Life Committee, the Human Rights Review, the
- annual antiabortion marches organized by Nellie Gray, which have
- been praised by recent Presidents. These were largely decorous
- undertakings with their roots in Roman Catholicism. Civil
- disobedience was not their style; it remains so little to their
- liking that the National Right to Life Committee newsletter
- never refers to the activities of Operation Rescue.
- </p>
- <p> But after the Roe v. Wade decision in 1973, two things
- happened: some individual crazies began to bomb abortion
- clinics, and younger Catholics who believed in direct action
- (many from their experience in civil rights and antiwar
- protests) began around 1975 to sit in at clinics. This latter
- was the "peaceful presence" branch of Catholic direct action,
- much of its activity coordinated by John Cavanaugh-O'Keefe, a
- Harvard graduate inspired to pacifism by Thomas Merton. This
- form of activism produced the one authentic hero of the pro-life
- movement, Joan Andrews, a pacifist and longtime protester for
- human rights, who served 2 1/2 years in a Florida jail for
- attempting to disengage a suction machine used in abortions. She
- practiced "loving noncooperation" with her jailers and was put
- in solitary confinement. Many law officers as well as a growing
- number of protesters worked for her release. This pro-life
- faction began running crisis pregnancy centers to help mothers
- bear their children and find parents to adopt them.
- </p>
- <p> There was a smaller, "frankly harassing" group of Catholics
- engaged in direct action, symbolized by Joseph Scheidler of
- Chicago. He did things like hire a detective to track down a
- woman who was planning to have an abortion, and justified his
- outrageous actions by the publicity they brought to his cause:
- "Hiring that detective got me 60 interviews." Scheidler boasts
- that he asked then President Reagan to meet with the families
- of clinic bombers. "That was the last time I was invited to the
- White House."
- </p>
- <p> Though some evangelical seminarians participated with the
- Catholic peace activists who sat in at clinics, the massive
- involvement of evangelicals did not begin until Terry met
- Andrews and Cavanaugh-O'Keefe at an umbrella meeting for direct
- actionists in 1986. At a similar meeting in 1987, Terry met Juli
- Loesch (now Loesch Wiley), a self-described "Catholic lefty" who
- had left college to support the United Farm Workers. That year
- she was organizing the "We Will Stand Up" clinic protests that
- stopped abortions in most of the cities the Pope visited on his
- U.S. tour. But she remembers Terry as "streaking over our sky
- like a comet" with plans for nationally organized sit-ins (which
- were about to be renamed rescues). A member of Feminists foro
- Life, Loesch Wiley later joined Terry's Operation Rescue,
- despite misgivings about its predominantly male leadership, as
- its first communications coordinator.
- </p>
- <p> Scheidler says Terry "was brilliant. He taped a song
- against abortion and sent it to all the pro-life groups. Later,
- when people met him, they said, `Oh, yeah, I know him, he's the
- kid with the frizzy hair who sang When the Battle Raged.'"
- Cavanaugh-O'Keefe gives a more dispassionate account of Terry's
- rise: "He organized without distraction for two years to
- undertake a national action, lasting several days, first in New
- York and then in Atlanta (at the Democratic National
- Convention). He organized it brilliantly and brought in all the
- pro-life groups." Terry also formed a team of nine organizers,
- all in their 30s, who have proved indefatigable. Though it has
- one Catholic, two ordained ministers and two women, the team's
- style is decidedly male, lay, young and clamorously pious in
- evangelical style.
- </p>
- <p> Terry appeals primarily to fellow evangelicals, the people
- who send their children to Christian schools or keep them in
- "home schools" with an even stricter Christian curriculum. Many
- supported Pat Robertson for President. Others revere the
- teachings of Francis Schaeffer, the evangelicals' cult
- intellectual who died in 1984, three years after issuing his A
- Christian Manifesto, which called for civil disobedience to stop
- the killing of babies by abortion.
- </p>
- <p> Catholics argue that a fetus is clearly human, relying on
- concepts of "natural law" that forbid tampering with
- reproduction even by contraception or sterilization.
- Evangelicals, in contrast, argue directly from the Bible,
- primarily from passages in which God says he knew his people
- when they were unaware of his call, even knew individuals in the
- womb (Psalms 139:13-16, a favorite text). They take their
- command to "rescue those who are being taken away" from Proverbs
- 24:11. The moment of conception is celebrated in Jewish and
- Christian scripture. Even so, many evangelicals were late to
- focus on this issue, after resenting court actions for so long
- on matters like banning prayer in schools and Christian symbols
- in public places. Terry has turned this late arrival on the
- scene to homiletic advantage, repeating over and over that it is
- time for the churches to repent their acquiescence in the
- "holocaust" of children killed since 1973. The saying his
- admirers most often quote is "There are no heroes in this
- movement; we were all 15 years too late."
- </p>
- <p> By most estimates, the anti-abortion activists are roughly
- two-thirds evangelical and one-third Catholic -- and the
- Catholics soon pick up the evangelicals' hymn-singing style at
- rallies that stir up and instruct people on the eve of any
- direct action. The movement is ecumenical, in that it has played
- down doctrinal differences between Fundamentalists and other
- evangelicals. Elements of the political right and left mingle
- more guardedly. Andrews, whose "other issues" include nuclear
- war and capital punishment, says of Terry, whose other issues
- are pornography and prayer in schools, "I hope we will be able
- to influence each other." Some evangelicals see the pro-life
- movement as the vehicle by which they will resume the active
- public influence they lost in the 1920s after the Scopes trial.
- Abortion has become for them what anti-Communism was for
- preachers like Carl McIntire and Billy James Hargis. Says the
- Duke University Divinity School's respected evangelical
- historian George Marsden: "This is the sort of thing that won't
- go away. It's a way of getting at a whole package of issues."
- </p>
- <p> But less parochial people are also responding to the moral
- fervor of the activists. Christopher Hitchens, writing in the
- Nation, has criticized pro-choice arguments from the left,
- saying that the fetus is obviously a human life: "What other
- kind could it be?" Readers of the socialist In These Times and
- the pacifist Friends Journal recently came across an article by
- Nanlouise Wolfe and Stephen Zunes that began: "Our reaction to
- scenes of antiabortion activists engaging in civil disobedience
- outside abortion clinics is probably similar to that of many on
- the left: `What are they doing using our tactics?' One major
- factor may be uncomfortable for many of us to admit: many of
- them are us." Nat Hentoff of the Village Voice now speaks and
- writes against abortion.
- </p>
- <p> Some Catholics, left behind in this outpouring of new
- energies on what was considered "their" issue, seem to be
- running to catch up. Auxiliary Bishop Austin Vaughan of
- Newburgh, N.Y., has gone to jail with Operation Rescue, and
- Cavanaugh-O'Keefe claims other bishops are considering that
- step. The threat of increasingly harsh penalties for sit-ins,
- especially under the suspect RICO anti-racketeering statute,
- brings out more defiant rhetoric from the pro-lifers. Some
- leaders have sold their homes and disposed of other property to
- live in imitation of Andrews, who gave up her worldly goods to
- pursue the cause. Says Cavanaugh-O'Keefe, who is identified by
- some in the movement as "the father of rescue": "I think there
- will be tremendous numbers who will risk jail in the coming
- year." He even argues, "This civil rights movement is larger,
- in terms of sheer numbers of supporters and of those who have
- gone to jail all over the nation, than the civil rights movement
- of the '60s. We're now ready to fill the jails."
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-