This coming Monday we officially celebrate Martin Luther King Jr. - TopicsExpress



          

This coming Monday we officially celebrate Martin Luther King Jr. -- civil rights activist, minister, freedom fighter, martyr, contraception advocate. Huh? If you didnt know that, youre not alone. While King was advocating for civil rights, he was also speaking out for the basic human right of women and couples to decide for themselves the number of children they wanted and were able to care for. Family planning, in other words. The post-war baby boom was picking up speed. Oral contraceptives werent yet available. Griswold v. Connecticut -- the Supreme Court case that ruled people have a right to privacy and a state cant ban contraception -- was more than a decade away. The average American woman had nearly twice as many kids as she does today, and it wasnt always easy to get by, especially for women and families of color. As one mother wrote to King in his December 1957 Advice for Living column, published in Ebony magazine: We have seven children and another one is on the way. Our four-room apartment is bursting at the seams and living space in Harlem is at a premium. I have suggested to my husband that we practice birth control, but he says that when God thinks we have enough children, He will put a stop to it. Ive tried to reason with him, but he says that birth control is sinful. Is he right? Kings response, in short: Your husband is wrong. I do not think it is correct to argue that birth control is sinful. The natural order is given us, not as an absolute finality, but as something to be guided and controlled. [...] Changes in social and economic conditions make smaller families desirable, if not necessary. [...] A final consideration is that women must be considered as more than breeding machines. It is true that the primary obligation of the woman is that of motherhood, but an intelligent mother wants it to be a responsible motherhood -- a motherhood to which she has given her consent, not a motherhood due to impulse and chance. And this means birth control in some form. All of these factors, seem to me, to make birth control rationally and morally justifiable. King put his beliefs into action. He supported the work of Planned Parenthood and agreed to serve on the sponsoring committee of a Planned Parenthood study on contraception. King was concerned about the consequences of unwanted pregnancies and wrote of his hopes that the federal and state governments will begin to appropriate large sums to educate people to the need for such [contraceptive] devices. In 1966, his wife, Coretta Scott King, accepted Planned Parenthoods inaugural Margaret Sanger Award on his behalf, presented for his courageous resistance to bigotry and his lifelong dedication to the advancement of social justice and human dignity. m.huffpost/us/entry/2497686
Posted on: Fri, 16 Jan 2015 22:23:50 +0000

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