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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 April 2024
Abortion was a hot election issue in the US of 1984. The pro-family rhetoric of the Born-again Right predictably incurred the correspondingly doctrinaire derision of the women's movement and the Left. The National Organisation for Women (NOW) banned from its platform women who in any way opposed abortion. Both sides agree, it seems, that abortion is a primary and integral component of women's liberation and a crucial test of ‘reliability’ for or against.
All the more vital, then, is the search for ethical consistency and clarity which is being maintained in some wings of the peace and women's movements. This was given some force by the visit to Britain last autumn of the US Catholic pacifist Juli Loesch, who founded, in 1979, an organisation called Prolifers for Survival. She came to promote a parallel network here. This exploratory visit, (sponsored by Pax Christi, some members of London SPUC and Women for Life) provoked signs of increasing polarisation in UK. One reaction in Peace News-which in 1983 published a reflective consideration of the links between private and public violence-‘was to curl into a ball and puke’.
A UK branch of this organisation was launched in January. For information contact Veronica Whitty, 26 Park field Road, London N.W.10, tel. 01–459 3870.
1 Rosemary Radford Ruether's essays on Church and Family (New Blackfriars January—May 1984) show that the ‘bible‐based’ bourgeois model so beloved of the Right in the US is unmatched by historical, economic or social reality.
2 Nuclear Madness, Autumn Press, Mass. USA 1978.
3 Allocution at the General Audience of 8.8.1984.
4 The Challenge of Peace: God's Promise and Our Response, CTS/SPCK £1.50. Discussed in detail by Roger Ruston, ‘NO to the Nuclear Warriors: The US Bishops’ Pastoral’, New Blackfriars December 1983.
5 In his 1984 Gannon lecture at Fordham University, New York, to symbolize the consistent ethic which he argued that one should bring to all questions concerning life (war, capital punishment, abortion).
6 Are Women Today's Prophets? Address given for the Catholic women's network, Westminster Cathedral Conference Centre, London, August 23 1984.