They
Wouldn’t do this to a Dog
Patricia Pitkus Bainbridge, HLI Chairman
March 17, 2005
Terri
Schindler Schiavo is a 40-year-old severely disabled
woman whose husband and parents are engaged in a legal
conflict about whether she will be allowed to live
or whether she will be forced to die by dehydration
and starvation. As I write, the battle for her life
continues to rage. Her parents are fighting to save
her life and her estranged husband continues to seek
her death. By the time you read this, the courts will
most likely have determined whether Terri’s
life has been spared or whether she will be in the
process of experiencing a slow, agonizing death.
Terri
is not receiving extraordinary care. However, because
she is severely brain damaged and has a feeding tube,
there are those who believe her life is not worth
living and that she should die by starvation and dehydration.
You can be jailed for starving an animal. Many who
rightly fight for the humane treatment of animals
and many who rightly oppose the death penalty for
convicted criminals see nothing wrong with starving
Terri to death. This makes no sense.
In
reference to Terri and others in similar conditions,
I have heard some say, “I know I wouldn’t
want to live that way.” Certainly, no rational
person would choose such circumstances. I doubt John
Paul II would have chosen his current condition. However,
while we do have the right to refuse certain medical
procedures, we do not have the right to cause our
own death or the death of another.
Those
who do not fully understand the teachings of the Church
think it humane to hasten the death of someone they
view as a suffering person. The Holy Father addresses
this in Evangelium Vitae when he writes, “In
reality, what might seem logical and humane when looked
at more closely is seen to be senseless and inhumane.”
Popular
culture appears to be excessively preoccupied with
not having a good “quality” of life and
avoiding suffering at all costs. The culture of life,
however, teaches that all human life has value and
that we are to provide care, not death, for those
who are suffering. Our Holy Father writes, “true
compassion leads to sharing another’s pain;
it does not kill the person whose suffering we cannot
bear.” (Evangelium Vitae, #66). And, make no
mistake, when a feeding tube is removed from a person
who is not imminently dying, is not allowing the natural
death process to occur—it is killing that person.
A
March 2004 joint statement from the Pontifical Academy
for Life and the World Federation of Catholic Medical
Associations states, “The possible decision
of withdrawing nutrition and hydration, necessarily
administered to VS [“vegetative” state]
patients in an assisted way, is followed inevitably
by the patients’ [sic] death as a direct consequence.
Therefore, it has to be considered a genuine act of
euthanasia by omission, which is morally unacceptable.”
Thirty-eight
year old Sarah Scantlin of Hutchinson, Kansas recently
surprised her family and medical professionals when
she spoke for the first time in 20 years. Sarah, who
is severely physically disabled and has been in what
is described as a “persistent vegetative state”
since 1984, suddenly and without any explanation is
speaking.
I
am thrilled that Sarah has regained the ability to
speak, but it is important to acknowledge that her
value as a human being is no different now than when
she was unable to speak. Her life, like Terri’s
has intangible value based on human nature itself.
All
human beings, regardless of their physical, intellectual,
or emotional condition have worth and dignity simply
because they are human. Our worth is not dependent
on what we can do, but on who we are—persons
made in the image of God.
Terri
Schiavo should be allowed to live. What her husband
wants to do to her would not be done to a dog and
it must not be done to her!
This
article originally appeared in the March 4, 2005 edition
of The Observer.
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