Monday, November 4, 2024

Rita Marker, the Great Anti-Assisted-Suicide Champion, Has Died at 83

This article was published by National Review online on November 1, 2024

Wesley Smith
By Wesley J Smith

The great anti-euthanasia warrior, Rita Marker, has died at 83 after a long illness.

Rita was in Europe in the mid 1980s and, out of curiosity, attended an international right-to-die convention. She was so alarmed by what she heard, she and her late husband and soulmate Mike Marker, formed the nonprofit International Anti-Euthanasia Task Force (later renamed the Patients Rights Council). Along with a loyal staff, Rita began decades of work pushing against that dark agenda.

Not every great public-policy activist becomes a household name. Rita wasn’t interested in notoriety or fame. Effectiveness was her lodestar, that and personal sacrifice. For as long as she was physically able, she gave all she had to the cause.

Rita Marker
Rita had stage fright, but she spoke countless times to venues large and small.

Rita was terrified of flying. But she traveled the country and the world, speaking against euthanasia and in favor of compassionate care.

Rita was a devout Catholic. But she insisted that the task force’s opposition to assisted suicide be focused through a human-rights and secular lens.

Rita did not have a professional degree — until she decided that she would be most effective by becoming a lawyer. She attended a mail-in law school while still working more than full time for the task force and passed the California bar exam — the nation’s toughest — on her first attempt.

Unlike organizations on the other side of this issue, anti-assisted-suicide work doesn’t have the backing of billionaires like George Soros. The task force mostly depended on smaller donations and grants, so the finances could sometimes be iffy. As a result, Rita was woefully underpaid, particularly given her indefatigable exertions, sometimes even skipping paychecks to ensure that the work continued.

Rita could have a brittle exterior, but underneath, her heart was ripe and tender. When Ann Humphry — co-founder of the Hemlock Society with her husband, Derek Humphry — contracted breast cancer, Derek separated from her. Then, her compatriots in the right-to-die movement shunned her. Ann reached out in despair to the old enemy, Rita Marker. Rita spread her arms and welcomed Ann as a close friend.

After Ann killed herself, Rita authored a moving book about their relationship. Deadly Compassion: The Death of Ann Humphry and the Truth About Euthanasia remains a classic in the genre.

Ann came to see the wrongness of the assisted-suicide movement she had helped spawn, and in a final note to Rita before her death, she urged, “Do the best you can.”

Rita always did. I am convinced that in her time, Rita was the most effective anti-assisted-suicide/euthanasia champion in the world.

Rita’s life was full. She is survived by seven children, 29 grandchildren, and 13 great-grandchildren.

So, rest in peace, Rita. You fought the good fight. You finished the race. You kept the faith. You served your purpose. The world is better for your having been in it.

4 comments:

  1. It's always sad when great people die, but the world is much better for Rita having been in it and for her having promoted the most important cause of the great dignity of the human person. May she rest in peace and enjoy her eternal reward.

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  2. God bless people such as Rita who dared to
    live by her principles and to fight for life and support for the living. The world has been enriched by her life!

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  3. Death at Arms Length : To take one's own life or the life of a mother's infant in the womb, assistance is sought from the medical community that, in turn, is regulated by the legal community in terms of allowable reasons under the law.
    These 'death' laws are far from being written in stone and are systematically being 'chipped' away in the courts. A good example of this 'chipping' action is found with abortion legislation that has been on the books much longer than euthanasia. The original legislation sounded quite lofty and we were left thinking they might only be used in cases of rape or danger to the mother's health. But not so, and now women commonly use as their reason for wanting to have an abortion as 'being inconvenient' !
    This is the 'slippery slope syndrome' and the making of hollow laws.

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  4. Yes indeed! When I read about Heather being accused of being selfish it reminded me of a disabled friend who was accused of being selfish for keeping her baby. Unfortunately I never knew Rita. May she rest in peace

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