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Monday, March 14, 2016
Tuesday, March 8, 2016
International Women's Day and the Women With No Names
When was the last time you went to your doctor? How about
your OBGYN? Did you wonder how this specialty of medicine came into existence?
I hadn’t given it much thought until I listened to a program on NPR a few weeks
ago about the father of modern gynecology—J. Marion Sims.
But I don’t want to talk about him, at least not directly. March
is Women’s History Month (and today is International Women's Day), so I want to talk about the women who made his
discoveries possible. The women he practiced on. The women he studied. And more
importantly, I want to talk about the women he exploited to find cures to
ailments many of us no longer are at risk of facing.
I don’t want this day to pass by without saying something.
I care about women. I care about the issues women face. I care about the women
who have gone before me. I care about women who have suffered in ways I have a
hard time imagining. Which is why I listened to a broadcast of The Hidden Brain on NPR.
The February 16 episode tells the story of slave women Sims operated on in
order to find a cure for obstetric fistula. He found the cure, but not before
he operated on these women without anesthesia, without their consent, and in
horrifying conditions. One of these women, the primary subject of the episode,
is named Anarcha.
It’s not an easy thing to listen to, these stories of
mutilation and pain at the hands of this doctor. But I felt I had to listen in
order to give honor and power to their stories. These women were real women.
Real people who had no opportunity to consent or even ask for the “treatment”
they were receiving. These were women who were not only abused by slave owners,
thus resulting in their pregnancies, but they also suffered the agony of then
losing those babies in complicated deliveries. We don’t even have names for all
of them. A name, the thing that gives us our identity and individuality, is not
even documented for some of these women.
In history books we read stories of people and so often we
know their names. We know of Harriett Tubman and Martha Washington. We know of
Jackie Kennedy and Susan B. Anthony. But for the women whose broken bodies were
literally the very foundation for so many of the medical advances we have
today, we have no names. Only stories. We have documents telling us what they
went through, the cures that were found, but we have no names. And all I kept
thinking as I heard of what they endured, at the hands of a doctor who wanted
to make medical progress, is that God knows their names. They are not lost to
him. We know Anaracha’s name, but God knows them all.
So I want to honor these women this month, the women who
have no names, and even the one who is—Anarcha. I know what it’s like to have
complicated pregnancies and to lose babies, but more than that, I live in the
modern age where so many of the difficulties I faced having children were
remedied by the very medicine these women went through so much pain for. You
probably did, too.
Their bodies were broken, so mine could be whole. Their
children were lost, so I could hold mine. Their lives were ruined by the curse
of childbirth, so mine wouldn’t have to be. This is a sacrifice that none of us
deserve, but that I am eternally grateful for. So as I hold my healthy baby and
hug my growing twin boys, I am thankful to God for them, these mothers of
modern gynecology. They deserved better than what they received at the hands of
a doctor who was zealous for his own medical discoveries and glory. They
deserved to be treated with dignity and respect. They deserved to be treated as
humans. They deserved to be cared for, not mutilated. And they deserved to be named.