By
Amy Hasbrouck
of Toujours Vivant-Not Dead Yet:
A
Project of the Council of Canadians with Disabilities (CCD)
Amy Hasbrouck with John Kelly |
Sue Griffiths of Winnipeg , MB is the latest person to publicize her desire for
assisted suicide, and to have her efforts celebrated by the press.
Last week, her
plea for parliament to re-open the assisted suicide question was widely
reported as she prepared to go to Dignitas, a clinic in Switzerland that helps people kill themselves.
Ms. Griffiths has
Multiple Systems Atrophy, a degenerative neurological condition which causes
pain in about half the people who have it. Photos show her standing, walking and using her hands; she is certainly
not a person who is “physically unable to commit suicide without help.” She is
described as a person who is in charge of her life, but she apparently wants to
have someone else take charge of her death.
The reasons she
gives for wanting to kill herself are related to disability, needing help with
personal care and other daily activities, having to use adaptive equipment,
losing independence. The subtext is
that, as a person with a disability, she believes she will be less worthy, less
dignified, less than fully human.
In point of fact, disability is
NOT a fate worse than death. When people
become disabled, they must grieve the loss of abilities they had, just as a
parent might grieve the loss of a child, or one grieves the loss of one's home
after a natural disaster. But no one
would suggest it's a good idea for the bereaved parent or survivor of a natural
disaster to commit suicide, much less that she/he be helped to die.
We have a policy to prevent
suicides, and rightfully so. We apply
this policy to people whose despair arises from social as well as psychological
stresses; bullied adolescents, LGBT people who’ve been persecuted, Aboriginal people
struggling with poverty and loss of cultural heritage, and survivors of
domestic violence. People with
disabilities who lack services and supports to live in their homes and be
integrated in their communities face the same discrimination and social
stressors. Suicide prevention policies
and services should be applied equally to disabled and non-disabled people,
without bias or prejudice about the quality of life with a disability. And society must begin to address the
underlying discrimination and stigma that create the conditions in which people
with disabilities live.
We should really be asking: Why is no one trying to
stop Susan Griffiths from committing suicide? Does the media orgy around Griffiths story mean that we believe the everyday realities of
living with a disability are reason enough to get help to die? And should the media rise to the bait every
time a person with a disability flaunts their suicide in the public square.
Link to the article: Swiss Suicide case is only part of the assisted suicide debate.
Link to the article: Death becomes him.
3 comments:
Having a disability isn't the issue here; it's the pain aspect. I have a disability that is continually progressing. And with that, comes increased pain. In a perfect world, I'd grow old with my husband, watching my grandkids enjoy life, and die peacefully in my sleep. But the reality is my body is failing me. The pain is bearable for now, but when it is a constant in my life and no cure is in sight, there is no good reason why I should be chained to a life of endless pain. It's easy for you to say that assisted suicide is horrible, but when you're in so much pain that living becomes worse than a jail sentence, that assisted suicide option becomes the most humane thing to allow someone like myself to do. Compassion comes first!
I am very sorry to read about your pain but compassion does not lead a society to kill its members but rather to care for its members.
Pain can be cared for and I hope that society puts far greater resources into eliminating your pain.
Assisted suicide or euthanasia is not the answer.
The reason why no one is standing up to stop Mrs. Giffiths is because the media won't publish anything that may come against assisted suicide, just like anything prolife.
I listened to comments from a number of Republicans who stood up in Congress yesterday to denounce the abortionist Kermit Gosnall and the lack of media attention to his murder trial. They are afraid, as I am, that the world is becoming hardened and immune to such evils but as the Bible states in Isaiah 5 or 6, "Woe unto those who call evil good and good evil" but that's the world we are living in in 2013!
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