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Real voices talk of reproductive rights
Date : Thursday, March 11, 2004
Source : Akron Beacon Journal
Sticks and stones may break bones, but words are more effective.
Take Emily Lyons, for instance. She was maimed by a pipe bomb planted in 1998 at
the Birmingham, Ala., abortion clinic where she worked as a nurse. Eric Rudolph, who also is charged with the 1996 Olympic
Park bombing and two others, awaits trial.
''Prior to this, I did not feel like I was in a war. That has all changed. And,
the war has not stopped,'' said Lyons.
Although it was intended to kill her, the violence committed against Lyons ultimately
gave her a voice with which to fight the attack on a woman's right to choose her method of birth control.
It's a voice represented in playwright Cindy Cooper's Words of Choice, a dramatic
patchwork pieced together with excerpts from a dozen real stories, including a father's reaction to the rape of his daughter,
an anti-abortion activist's spoken-word piece, testimony from a mother who made the painful decision to have a late-term abortion,
and a farcical contraceptive burrito marketed by Taco Bell.
''I wanted to create a work that could show the huge panorama of reproductive rights,
not just abortion,'' said Cooper. ''I wanted it to reflect the full complexity of these issues.''
Words of Choicewill be performed at 7:30 p.m. Friday at the Unitarian Universalist
Church of Akron and at 7:30 p.m. Saturday at Kent State University's Oscar Ritchie Hall.
Proceeds from the performances will benefit the Akron Coalition for the March to
Save Women's Lives, who will use the money to pay travel costs for women traveling from Akron to Washington, D.C., for the
April 25 march.
Deb Lumiere, the director and producer of the local Words of Choice production
and a principal actor in it, sees current efforts to overturn Roe v. Wade and to legislate fetal rights as an immediate threat
to women's rights, making this play a timely commentary.
''We lose focus of the whole point in pro-life vs. pro-choice arguments. This is
not about abortion itself, and it is not an issue of right or wrong -- that is a personal decision. It's about who has control
over your body, as a woman. It's about your legal personhood and the way it is defined by the law,'' said Lumiere.
In one of the play's more harrowing moments, a father recounts his decision to
help his daughter get an abortion after she was abducted and gang-raped. By including such a voice, Cooper's play realizes
that women's rights are not isolated to their direct effect on women, but that men, too, are part of the larger public discussion
on reproductive rights.
''It was happenstance that I included a male voice,'' said Cooper. ''But I'm glad
I did, because, especially among younger women, it's a positive reinforcement that men do care about women, and that we aren't
divided by gender.''
Cooper spent three years collecting stories from spoken words, court testimonies,
journalism, poetry and even comedy.
''It's theater's version of the reality TV show; that is what makes it effective,''
said Lumiere. ''And that it's coming from all these different places and different types of people. It creates a truer picture
rather than having one little spin on it.''
<< Akron Beacon Journal -- 3/11/04 >>
Actors perform pro-choice theater
By Caitlin Carroll,
George Washington University
Pro-choice students gathered in the Marvin Center Tuesday
to commemorate the 31st anniversary of the U.S. Supreme Court's Roe v. Wade decision. The monumental decision legalized abortion
throughout the country.
"Words of Choice"... approached the issue of reproductive rights from serious and lighthearted angles,
focused on the personal experiences of people affected by reproductive rights issues.
The 90-minute event also brought
several pro-choice speakers from outside of the GW community to comment on the production.
Cindy
Cooper, a freelance writer and former communications director for the Center for Reproductive Rights, developed the slogan
"engaging in pro-choice theater" for "Words of Choice."
"I think we needed to break
out of talking about policies and laws and start talking about people," Cooper said. "I get very frustrated with general coverage
of the general media because it focuses on the politics of abortion rather than people and experiences."
In a play titled "To Hell and Back: Emily Lyons," the actors presented the story of an employee at an
abortion clinic who was seriously wounded when pro-life activists bombed her workplace.
Another
skit, "Taco Bell Launch," based on an excerpt from the satirical publication, "The Onion," included a newscast about Taco
Bell's newest menu item - a contraceptive burrito.
"The piece pokes fun at all of
the hysteria about these things," said Marjorie Signer, director of communications for the Religious Coalition for Reproductive
Choice....
The GW March for Student Lives, a coalition between University
groups Voices for Choices, the Feminist Majority Leadership Alliance and the Student Global AIDS Campaign, sponsored the event....
"I think that it is all about raising awareness," FMLA President Joy Welan said. "Just opening up that
discussion is important as well as publicizing the march."
Last year, President
George W. Bush signed legislation banning all partial-birth, or late-term abortions. Last Friday, the president appointed
Charles Pickering, an anti-abortion activist, to the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals. Pro-choice activists said they are afraid
that this could be Roe v. Wade's last anniversary if Americans re-elect Bush.
"I'm
most worried about the overturn of Roe," said Evelyn Becker, deputy communications director of NARAL Pro Choice America. "We
are certainly doing everything in our power to preserve the right to choose."
Becker
said if any Supreme Court justices retire, Bush will appoint anti-abortion replacements. She said one to three justices could
retire in the near future, furthering the potential to overturn or alter the ruling.
Following
Tuesday's discussion, Olga Vives, action vice president of the National Organization for Women, encouraged audience members
to rally for reproductive rights.
"It is about time that we put an end to this discussion
because it is a fundamental right for women to be able to plan their families," she said. "The government has no role in this
decision."
-Elizabeth Chernow contributed to this report.
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