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- <text id=91TT1980>
- <title>
- Sep. 09, 1991: Abortion:Whose Side Are You On?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Sep. 09, 1991 Power Vacuum
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 19
- ABORTION
- Whose Side Are You On?
- </hdr><body>
- <p>For weary Wichitans, the protests may finally be subsiding, but
- the healing has yet to begin
- </p>
- <p>By Jon D. Hull/Wichita
- </p>
- <p> Before Operation Rescue came to town in mid-July, Linda
- Barber and her brother Rick Middleton hardly ever talked about
- abortion. Now they hardly ever talk. Rick, 39, enlisted with the
- pro-life forces and was twice arrested for trying to shut down
- one of the city's three abortion clinics. Linda, 35, volunteered
- to escort the terrified female patients past the demonstrators.
- "I had no clue she was pro-choice," says Rick. "The
- relationship in our family is definitely strained." Linda is
- less polite. "I feel he's in bed with a bunch of criminals," she
- says. "I can't imagine spending this Christmas together."
- </p>
- <p> Just about every bar, restaurant and dining room table in
- Wichita has played reluctant host to an impassioned debate on
- abortion this summer. "It's going to take some time to regain
- a center of gravity," says Mayor Bob Knight, displaying a 6-in.
- stack of angry letters on his desk. "The passions and feelings
- are so deep, and the city of Wichita has been criticized by
- everybody."
- </p>
- <p> City officials were relieved last week as the number of
- protesters dropped dramatically, after weekend rallies that drew
- at least 25,000 pro-lifers and 6,000 pro-choicers from across
- the country. Though shock troops on both sides are exhausted,
- following 2,600 arrests and countless screaming matches, tempers
- remain high. "The lines are drawn in offices and factory
- plants," says the Rev. George Gardner of College Hill United
- Methodist Church. Jane Gilchrist, a leading pro-choice activist,
- complains, "You can't go to the grocery store, church or the
- barbershop without talking about it."
- </p>
- <p> At a proudly counterculture bar called Kirby's, blatant
- pro-lifers are likely to be booted from the premises. Elsewhere,
- pro-choicers face similar hazards. "I've been elbowed, stepped
- on, spit on and called Satan's mistress," says Marina Clemente,
- 26, who unwittingly entered a pro-life sandwich shop and found
- herself "verbally abused" by 20 patrons once she revealed her
- views. Others have been drawn closer together. "This is about
- the only thing my mother-in-law and I agree on," says Patricia
- Beltz, 36, as she waves a pro-choice placard in front of one of
- the clinics.
- </p>
- <p> Before July 15, most residents were preoccupied with
- rising property taxes, gang violence and renewed efforts to ban
- nude dancing. Civic boosters lauded themselves for snaring two
- Miss U.S.A. pageants in a row. But all the factors that make
- Wichita a nice place to raise a family--its manageable size,
- heartland values and high standards of civility--also proved
- irresistible to out-of-state Operation Rescue activists. Though
- largely pro-choice, Wichita contains all the ingredients for
- staging a militant morality play on abortion. Says Steve Smith,
- assistant managing editor of the Wichita Eagle: "We're on the
- fringes of the Bible Belt; we have a strong evangelical
- presence, a pro-life Governor and an arguably pro-life mayor."
- More important, Wichita is home to the Women's Health Care
- Services clinic, where George Tiller is one of a handful of U.S.
- physicians known to perform late-term abortions.
- </p>
- <p> Tiller, who wears a bulletproof vest to work and checks
- his car for bombs every morning, has emerged as a hero to the
- pro-choice movement, refusing to be intimidated by protesters
- and death threats. To pro-lifers, he is a modern-day Mengele.
- Says Paula Winter, a "sidewalk counselor" who tries to dissuade
- patients from entering the clinic: "He kills 10 to 20 babies a
- week in his `abortuary' and then puts them into his incinerator
- and burns them."
- </p>
- <p> Along the thoroughfare that adjoins Tiller's clinic, a
- dozen pro-lifers and half as many pro-choicers petition
- passersby with wrenching pictures and alarming slogans.
- Commuters honk to register their vote--or throw cans, bottles
- and even bags of urine. Says Mayor Knight: "People who in my
- wildest dreams would never protest--much less put themselves
- in a position to be arrested--have done just that." The
- abortion debate has a way of inducing indignation even among the
- timid and indecisive. "I came out of the closet a week ago,"
- says pro-choicer Paul Wilson, 75. "The silent majority is sick
- and tired of this invasion by outsiders."
- </p>
- <p> The battle lines are riddled with ironies. Pro-lifers,
- usually from law-and-order backgrounds, rage against police
- brutality (of which there has been little so far). Pro-choicers,
- including avowed lefties, complain that the police are going
- easy on the opposition. Both sides have formed local subgroups
- of Republicans, Democrats and religious leaders to endorse their
- cause.
- </p>
- <p> While everybody is claiming victory, Operation Rescue's
- tactics appear to have backfired. In a poll published Aug. 11
- by the Wichita Eagle, nearly 80% of respondents opposed the
- group's methods. The same number said the protests had no impact
- on their views on abortion, while 15% said they now felt more
- inclined to support abortion rights, and less than 8% felt more
- supportive of abortion restrictions.
- </p>
- <p> Wichita will have an easier time recouping its national
- reputation than repairing its internal divisions. "I think there
- are some people so inflamed that they won't cool down for a
- lifetime," says the Rev. Jack Middleton of Wichita Bible Church.
- Middleton's own healing process begins at home, as he tries to
- get his children Linda and Rick back on speaking terms in time
- for Christmas.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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