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Associated Press, January 21, 2005
Church plans to
bury fetal remains from abortions collected
without abortion clinic's knowledge
DATELINE: BOULDER, Colo.
A Roman Catholic church plans to bury the ashes
of up to 1,000 aborted fetuses Sunday to mark
the 32nd anniversary of Roe v. Wade, prompting
scathing criticism from family planning groups.
Boulder Abortion Clinic director Dr. Warren Hern,
who had no idea the mortuary working with his
clinic had been sending ashes to Sacred Heart
of Mary Church, said the decision was "a
cynical exploitation of private grief for political
purposes."
Chuck Myers, the director of Crist Mortuary,
has an agreement with the clinic to collect
and cremate tissue and had been giving the
ashes to the church since 2001. Myers also
delivered ashes to the parish for three years
in the mid-1990s while working as a funeral
home director, said parish volunteer Susan
LaVelle.
"What was going to happen to those ashes
if we didn't pick them up? Would they be thrown
away? I hope my words would never harm someone.
My message is one of healing," LaVelle
told The Denver Post in Friday's editions.
The arrangement does not violate state law, Department
of Public Health spokesman Glenn Mallory said.
Women who have abortions in Colorado are allowed
to dispose of the fetal remains. If they choose
not to, funeral homes or medical-waste facilities
do so.
LaVelle said Sunday's ceremony would involve
the remains of between 600 and 1,000 aborted
fetuses from November 2003 through and November
2004. She said the parish has held unannounced
burials twice a year since 2001, but the parish
priest agreed to make the burial public this
year.
"Abortion can be a real controversial issue,
but in my eyes and the eyes of people doing
this in our church, we believe these babies
deserve the dignity of a proper burial,"
LaVelle said.
Kate Horle, spokeswoman for Planned Parenthood
of the Rocky Mountains, said most of Hern's
patients have fetuses with fatal anomalies.
His clinic specializes in "late abortion
for fetal disorders," according to its
Web site.
"These women are devastated," Horle
said. "To discover that an entity is essentially
taking it upon themselves to create a religious
service that may not be acceptable to the family
is probably really painful."
<< Associated Press -- 1/21/05 >>
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