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From my new home in Canada, it pains me to look back at the United States, a nation founded by religious dissenters, tearing itself apart in the post-Roe era

Abortion-rights activist Jon Mort looks at his sculpture, titled Gates of Hell, in front of the Washington Monument this past June, after the U.S. Supreme Court ruling that overturned Roe v. Wade and allowed states to restrict abortion access. Andrew Kelly/Reuters

John Irving is the author of 15 novels, including The Last Chairlift, which was recently published. This essay is adapted from a speech given in San Antonio, Tex., on Oct. 29 – a virtual lecture for the 43rd Annual National Convention of the Freedom From Religion Foundation.

I live full-time in Toronto. In immigration terms, I became a permanent resident of Canada in 2015 and a Canadian citizen in 2019. I made a point of keeping my U.S. citizenship, because I intend to continue to vote in my birth country. Officially, I’m a dual citizen of Canada and the United States.

Last summer, I was watching the CBC TV news from Edmonton, regarding the visit of Pope Francis, who was asking the forgiveness of Indigenous peoples for the Catholic Church’s role in the history of residential schools in Canada – the separation (and subsequent abuse) of Indigenous children forcibly taken from their families. The Pope was in Canada to apologize for Christianity’s role in colonization.

If I’d been in Edmonton, I wouldn’t have been allowed within speaking distance of the Popemobile, but I would (respectfully) like to ask Pope Francis if he has any plans to apologize to a great many non-religious Americans. I would like to tell Pope Francis that his acolytes on the U.S. Supreme Court have imposed a papal definition of right-to-life on the rest of us. But why would Pope Francis apologize for this? What’s happened in the United States is what the hierarchy of the Roman Catholic Church and many evangelical churches have long sought – namely, to impose their doctrinal beliefs on all of us.

Of the Republican-appointed justices who voted to overturn Roe on the U.S. Supreme Court, only one isn’t Catholic. He’s Episcopalian, but he was born and raised Catholic; his mother, a staunch anti-abortion activist, worked in the Reagan administration. To all intents and purposes, the Republican-appointed justices on the U.S. Supreme Court were more in step with the Vatican than they were with the First Amendment – the part that says “make no law respecting an establishment of religion.” In overturning Roe v. Wade, these justices have made such a law.

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The current Supreme Court justices. Sonia Sotomayor, far left, and Elena Kagan, far right, voted against overturning Roe v. Wade; Ketanji Brown Jackson, second from right, was appointed after the decision, replacing another dissenting judge, Stephen Meyer.J. Scott Applewhite/The Associated Press

The fatwa against the writer Salman Rushdie is a religiously imposed death penalty. Most Americans and Canadians would agree: Iran is an undemocratic theocracy. The United States is now an undemocratic theocracy. A born-again Christian, Ronald Reagan didn’t hesitate to bring God into his conversation about his opposition to a woman’s right to terminate an unwanted pregnancy. “We are a nation of idealists,” President Reagan said in a State of the Union address, “yet today there is a wound in our national conscience. America will never be whole as long as the right to life granted by our Creator is denied to the unborn.”

I wonder if my birth country’s “national conscience” is unaffected by the prospect of young (often underage) women and girls suffering unwanted pregnancies? These are women who may face criminal charges for ordering mail-order abortion pills, or for taking them. Yet more than two-thirds of Americans want to keep Roe; almost 60 per cent believe in a woman’s right to an abortion for any reason. Nonetheless, the anti-abortion crusaders have succeeded in their desire to punish women who don’t want (or who lack the means) to become mothers.

In June, 2019, I wrote an opinion piece for The New York Times called “The Long, Cruel History of the Anti-Abortion Crusade.” It was, in part, about the history of abortion in the United States – about how women, capable of determining and managing their own reproductive rights, have been undermined by men in power before.

In the time of the Puritans, America’s deeply religious founding fathers, abortion was allowed until the fetus was “quick” – meaning, when the woman could feel the fetus move. Abortion was permissible beyond the first trimester, up to four or five months. Our founding fathers got this right; the choice to have an abortion or a child belonged to the woman who was pregnant. With the help of midwives, women were having babies and abortions at home – since colonial times.

Beginning in the 1840s, and continuing over decades, abortion was outlawed state by state, becoming illegal everywhere in the United States by 1900 – until 1973, when the Roe v. Wade Supreme Court decision held that a woman had a constitutional right to an abortion. For more than two centuries –beginning when the Pilgrims landed in Plymouth, Mass. – abortion was largely permitted. Please remember, abortion was prohibited for scarcely a century. What’s happened now is religious backwardness.

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Catholic groups hold a service outside Northland Family Planning in Westland, Mich., on Nov. 5 to oppose a ballot measure that would codify the state's abortion rights.Evelyn Hockstein/Reuters

Please remember this, too: We are a nation founded by Separatist Puritans, who were fleeing religious persecution in England. Now the United States has chosen religious persecution. The idea that a fetus is a fully developed person with human rights is a theological concept. This is religious doctrine. This is what post-Roe America represents – namely, somebody else’s religion is being imposed on the rest of us. An undeveloped fetus has more rights than a fully developed woman. Yet once a fetus is fully developed and born, the same people who were so concerned for the fetus don’t care what happens to the unwanted child; what’s more, their foremost interest in the mother is to punish her.

And don’t forget that before the Roe v. Wade Supreme Court decision in 1973, the opposition to abortion wasn’t widely referred to as the right-to-life. Pope Pius XII used the right-to-life term in an “Address to Midwives on the Nature of Their Profession” – a 1951 papal encyclical. Here are Pope Pius XII’s own words: “Every human being, even the child in the womb, has the right to life directly from God and not from his parents, not from any society or human authority.” The poor midwives!

Have you noticed that the same people who sacralize the fetus are generally opposed to any meaningful welfare for unwanted children and unmarried mothers? The prevailing impetus to oppose abortion is to punish the woman who doesn’t want the child. The sacralizing of the fetus is a ploy.

How can “life” be sacred (and begin at six weeks, or at conception) if a child’s life isn’t sacred after it’s born? The Roman Catholic Church, and many evangelical and fundamentalist churches, willfully subject women to mandatory childbirth and motherhood – procreation is deemed a woman’s primary purpose and function. I’m not overstating! In his 1951 “Address to Midwives,” Pope Pius XII states that “the procreation and upbringing of a new life” is the primary end of marriage.

The end of Roe isn’t the end of King Lear – it’s not as well written – but what Shakespeare has Edgar say rings true. “The weight of this sad time we must obey/Speak what we feel, not what we ought to say.”

What Dickens wrote about the law should be shoved down the throats of conservative justices on the U.S. Supreme Court: “It is better to suffer a great wrong than to have recourse to the much greater wrong of the law.”

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A drag performer reads at a library in Mobile, Ala., in 2018.Dan Anderson/The Associated Press

As I read months ago in The Washington Post, a state senator from Oklahoma – Republican Rob Standridge – introduced a bill earlier this year. The bill would permit parents to remove LGBTQ books from school libraries, thus driving gay and trans kids to suicidal loneliness and depression – by making these kids feel more isolated than they already feel. Here’s what Senator Standridge said: “Christian parents don’t think schools should be evangelizing children into sexual ideologies they don’t agree with.” But with abortion rights, and with LGBTQ rights, it’s the Christians who are doing the evangelizing.

Another state legislator, Republican Representative Matt Krause of Texas – a San Antonio boy – attended an evangelical college and an evangelical law school. The law school was Liberty, founded by Rev. Jerry Falwell, who once said AIDS was “the wrath of a just God against homosexuals.” Matt Krause proposed legislation banning hundreds of books about abortion and LGBTQ subjects in libraries. My novel The Cider House Rules is among the banned books.

In contrast to Texas, I’m happy to report what’s happening in Ukraine. Brave Olga Nazarova and her Ranok publishing team are back to work. Olga recently sent me the new book jacket for the Ukrainian translation of The Cider House Rules. It doesn’t sound American to say: “Banned in Texas, published in Ukraine.” But that’s how it is in an undemocratic theocracy.

I keep telling this story; I’m tired of telling it. Of an unmarried woman or girl who got pregnant, people of my grandparents’ generation used to say: “She is paying the piper.” Meaning, she deserves what she gets – she deserves to give birth to an unwanted child. This cruelty is the abiding truth behind the dishonestly named right-to-life movement. Pro-life is and always was a marketing term. Whatever the anti-abortion crusaders call themselves, they don’t care what happens to an unwanted child – and they’ve never cared about the mother.

Freedom from religion isn’t a marketing term – it’s a necessity. Freedom of religion is a two-way street. Yes, it means that (in a democracy) we are free to practise the religion of our choice. But (in a democracy) it also means that we are protected from having someone else’s religion practised on us.

Not now – not in these United States.

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John Irving's novel The Last Chairlift touches on the politics of the U.S. religious right.Handout

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The Last Chairlift was Mr. Irving's first novel published as a Canadian citizen.Jennifer Roberts/The Globe and Mail

In December, 2016, I began The Last Chairlift, my 15th and longest novel – longer than Bleak House, shorter than David Copperfield (barely). I’ve been trying to imitate Charles Dickens since I was 15, when I read Great Expectations – the novel that made me want to be a novelist. I was 17 when I read Moby-Dick. Herman Melville showed me how to foreshadow a novel’s ending.

It is the intention of a novel by Charles Dickens to move a reader emotionally – more than to persuade a reader intellectually. These are my intentions, too. And to foreshadow an ending is a theatrical design, intended to set up a dramatic payoff – also to affect a reader emotionally. I write 19th-century, ending-driven novels with realistic characters. My readers tell me The Cider House Rules and A Prayer for Owen Meany are my novels with the most emotionally moving endings. I believe The Last Chairlift has an ending comparable to those two endings.

My foremost political targets in The Last Chairlift – namely, Republicans and the hierarchy of the Roman Catholic Church – have been living up to their questionable reputations. As The New York Times has reported, under Republican-appointed Chief Justice John Roberts, the U.S. Supreme Court has ruled in favour of religious groups 83 per cent of the time. As Democratic-appointed Justice Sonia Sotomayor wrote recently, in her dissenting opinion, “This Court continues to dismantle the wall of separation between church and state that the Framers sought to build.”

Thank you, Justice Sotomayor. She is the first woman of colour on the U.S. Supreme Court – the first Hispanic, and the first Latina. Sonia Sotomayor was raised Catholic. She attended Cardinal Spellman High School, a Roman Catholic high school in the Bronx. Justice Sotomayor deserves our thanks; she has not imposed the religious views of her church on the rest of us. She not only understands and respects the separation of church and state; she has most admirably represented that separation.

You may have heard there are ghosts in The Last Chairlift. It is a ghost story and a love story, spanning eight decades of sexual politics. As a non-religious person, believing in ghosts is as far as I can credibly venture into the spiritual world.

More important than the ghosts – more important to me – there is a good stepfather in The Last Chairlift. All the stepfathers in my novels are good, but this one is the best one. When he’s still a young man, he transitions to female; the good stepfather becomes an outstanding trans woman. Later in the story, there’s an awful crime scene, where this trans woman is called “the only hero.” My daughter is a trans woman; I’m very proud of her. I wanted to create a trans woman hero for my daughter, Eva, because Eva is my hero.

Abortion rights: More from The Globe and Mail

The Decibel podcast

Republicans didn’t get the “red wave” of victories they expected in the U.S. midterm elections. What does that mean for abortion rights? Public health reporter Rosemary Westwood, host of a podcast about the abortion battle in the Deep South, explains on The Decibel. Subscribe for more episodes.


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