Pro-Choice
Related: About this forumAbortion's Old Craft Can Still Be Cultivated
If our country will not give us access to the healthcare they wrested from us, we will need to reclaim it somehow.
Abortions Old Craft Can Still Be Cultivated
7/14/2023 by Debi Lewis
When doctors were unwilling to treat women, ancestral lore allowed them to care for themselves and each other.
First-century Greek women used a wild plant called silphium both to prevent and end pregnancies. (Daniela Baumann / Getty Images)
Last month marked one year since the U.S. Supreme Courts decision on the Dobbs case, which, for women and people with uteruses, made the possibility of becoming impregnated mean an utter loss of agency. Some would say weve returned to the pre-Roe v. Wade era, but its worse.This version of our reproductive reality would be unrecognizable to the women of our pastnot the ones who agitated for the right to reproductive choice that came with Roe v. Wade, but generations before them, long before rooms full of men in suits decided when and how we might be permitted to manage our fertility. When doctors were unwilling to treat women, ancestral lore allowed them to care for themselves and each other.
As a writer who spent the last two years researching the herbal remedies of the granny midwives of Appalachia for my novel in progress, I began with the question of how abortion worked before modern medicine. It turns out this question is far too specific: Women didnt always have that language for stopping pregnancy from advancing. The contemporary imagination that draws lines between fertility, conception and personhood is relatively new. In fact, there is a wealth of fascinating and actionableif not peer-reviewedhistorical wisdom on how to end a pregnancy.
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More than 3,500 years ago, ancient Egyptian women combined the unripe fruits of the acacia tree with a small, bitter melon called colocynth, mixed them with a paste of dates and honey, and wrapped it all in leaves to create a vaginal suppository. In any trimester, the Ebers Papyrus of 1500 BCE suggested this would be an effective way to end a pregnancy. Roughly 300 years later, the Old Testament included a recipe for a drink designed to make a woman miscarry: A combination of dust from the tabernacle floor, parchment on which a curse has been written, and holy water, this drink was recommended to end the pregnancies of women who had been unfaithful. This same part of the Bible was just used to justify banning abortions in South Carolina.
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We all know where it went from there. With the dispensing of modern medicine to the elite and abortion made illegal in a chunk of the country so big you could drive for nine hours straight from El Paso, Texas, to Hedgesville, W.V., without having access to safe and legal abortion. Our dearth of ancestral herbal knowledge has hamstrung us. Disconnected from the resourcefulness we cultivated before institutionalized science, women have come to rely on surgery and Western pharmaceuticals to end pregnancies they dont wish to continue. And so, I am planting a protest garden. I have planted white yarrow, wormwood, rue and pennyroyal in small, unassuming pots not far from my tomatoes and zinnias. The tansy I planted last year just to see how it smelled has shot even higher this June, pointing ever upward toward me. I do not know how to use these herbs or in what combinationsand I am not expecting to need thembut cultivating them has felt like a small act of resistance and reconnection. I hope this is silly, that I am romanticizing the copper pots and foraging of our pre-industrial foremothers, but if our country will not give us access to the healthcare they wrested from us, we will need to reclaim it somehow. I await the flowers and the seeds.
https://msmagazine.com/2023/07/14/abortion-ancient-native-women-history/
CTyankee
(65,097 posts)Thank you! I am myself inspired to hope that women will find these means again to protect our bodily integrity and joining with their sisters in forging a newer, stronger than ever, women's movement. We did it once; we'll do it again. Only better and stronger!