Today is a historic moment in the Republic of
Ireland. The referendum to repeal the 8th Amendment to the Irish
constitution—the one (written by men) declaring that a woman and her fetus have
an equal right to life. The one that has driven women for decades to make
difficult, lonely, painful, shame-filled journeys to other countries to
terminate pregnancies.
It was meant to ban Irish abortions. In
reality, it only banned them on Irish soil.
As you might expect from a country under the
thrall of an extraordinarily reactionary Church for centuries, Ireland has some
of the most repressive laws on the planet WRT women’s reproductive rights.
Basically: a woman has no rights when it comes to what goes on inside her uterus. The Evangelical
Taliban in my country looks to these laws with drooling envy.
The hashtag #Hometovote is trending across
Twitter as women (and men, to be sure) are traveling back to the old country to
cast their votes—some No, but the preponderance Yes. Bankok, Los Angeles,
Stockholm, Toronto, Hanoi, Sydney—some booked their tickets as soon as the
referendum was announced. Some, unable to fly home themselves, have offered to
pay the fare for others able to go.
The stories told in the length of each tweet (just cast your eye here, if you’re wondering) are at once uplifting and heartbreaking. The #Repealthe8th movement originated out of sorrow, following multiple cases where women (and girls) were forced to carry deformed or dying fetuses, or bear children resulting from rape; where women died from dangerous pregnancies because abortions were denied them.
I see that the opponents are waving the false
flags that we see here; if abortion becomes legal then hardly any pregnancy
will come to term. Blah, blah, blah. There’s a lot of talk from the Church about the sanctity of
life and women’s sacred role in it. This ignores the fact (noted above) that
Irish women still get abortions; they just have to leave the country to do so,
or seek back-alley providers, as women have done for centuries. And it’s not a
good look for an institution that for decades brought the Irish the Magdalene
laundries and endemic
sexual abuse of Irish children by Irish priests who were protected by the
entire Church infrastructure.
(Look—I’m not anti-Church. Entirely. I’m anti
institutions that do not accept accountability for their crimes, and which
still think they’re living in the Twelfth Century, and that we should join them
there. I am of the opinion that they should either catch up to us here in the
Twenty-first, or shut the fuck up. This includes the Republican party.)
If the referendum passes, it’s likely that the
Dáil will enact legislation allowing abortion under some conditions up to 12
weeks into pregnancy. This is hardly the abortions-on-every-corner state the
Noists are predicting. I get it—allowing women to make decisions about their
own reproductive plans is a massive threat to the Patriarchy. Getting the vote
in the first place was bad enough; #Repealthe8th is another shove at the
pillars of the Temple of Men (by Delilah, not Samson).
But—whether it’s this time or the next, or the
one after that—it’s coming. Vote, my sisters (and my brothers). Be brave and
proud. Make history.
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