Anita Cameron: Blacks and the Anti Assisted Suicide Movementby Diane Coleman |
[Editor's Note: Anita Cameron has served on the national NDY Board since late 2013. She is a longtime community organizer with ADAPT and I have had the honor of knowing and working with her since 1987 when I joined ADAPT. She is one of the leaders of Not Dead Yet Colorado. Her article, Blacks and the Anti Assisted Suicide Movement, is very important and I'm grateful for her permission to reprint it below.]
As
a disability rights activist, a critical part of disability rights
advocacy and activism is, for me, the fight against assisted suicide and
euthanasia.
I
have been involved in this aspect of the movement for quite some time,
upwards of 15 years. I am a member of, and sit on the board of Not Dead Yet,
a national, grassroots disability rights organization opposed to the
legalization of assisted suicide and euthanasia as deadly forms of
discrimination.
I've always noticed, but it has never really hit me until now, that very few Blacks are a part of the movement.
While
we do get support from other Blacks, and there may be a token Black or
two at local Not Dead Yet events and protests, as far as I know, I'm the
only Black person in the country who is consistently active in this
movement. I could be wrong. I hope I am.
Why is this? Why don't more Black folks get involved with the anti assisted suicide movement?
It
is well-known that the face of the anti assisted suicide movement,
indeed, the disability rights movement, is White. It is well-known that
often, contributions of Blacks to the disability rights movement are
erased or unacknowledged. Even if Blacks are seen as leaders, the ones
in front of the cameras or receiving the awards and accolades are
usually White.
A
2013 Pew study showed that 65% of Black folks are against assisted
suicide. Still, there is scant involvement of Black folks in campaigns
to stop legislation that would legalize assisted suicide and euthanasia.
I have some ideas why there's almost no Black participation in this movement.
1. This isn't a part of our culture.
Frankly,
assisted suicide isn't something that is discussed in the Black
community. I'd never heard of it, even though my birth mother lived with
chronic illness and lived to see the end results of her condition. Not
once did she complain. Not once did she ask to die. None of the folks in
my church or community wanted to die because they were sick or
disabled. I'm not saying that suicide doesn't exist in the Black
community, but in my experience, it was due to depression related to
situational issues, such as the loss of a job, a spouse or loved one or
something else entirely. When we get sick or become disabled, we or our
families often turn to prayer or the church.
2. Assisted suicide is considered a White thing.
Many
Black folks who I talk to about the anti assisted suicide movement say
"that's a White thing, we don't do that stuff". They ask me why have I
devoted myself to a predominantly White issue.
3.
Blacks with disabilities have enough specific issues to work on without
working on an almost exclusively White issue that doesn't affect us.
Some
Black activists have told me that I'm wasting time on a movement that
has nothing to do with us and that I should be involved in working on
issues that directly affect Black folks.
The
reasons above are valid but I've never let my race be a reason why I
don't do certain forms of activism. I have always been a pioneer, being
the first or only Black in my class or my town to do something.
When
I first got involved with the social justice and change movement at age
16, I was part of the anti nuclear movement. Yes, I was the only Black
person in my group, and that would be true of every group I was a part
of until I discovered ADAPT.
I
joined the anti assisted suicide and anti euthanasia movement because I
felt that it was important to fight against the devaluation of the
lives of people with disabilities. Physician assisted suicide and
euthanasia of people with disabilities is a deadly form of
discrimination resulting from the fact that doctors and others do not
see the lives of people with disabilities as valuable. This mirrors
society's beliefs that our lives are not worth living and that it is
better to be dead than disabled.
The
legalization of assisted suicide sets up a two-tiered system where if
a non-disabled person is suicidal, they will receive treatment sometimes
against their will, while people with disabilities experiencing the
same get assisted suicide as an "option" or "choice". Society frames the
suicide of a non-disabled person as, at worst, a very selfish act or at
best, the act of a sick person, while suicide by someone with a
disability is considered to be brave and considerate, rather than a
tragedy.
Assisted
suicide legalization supporters see it as a choice to end their lives
when they want to, but there are already options available without
legalization.
Sometimes
it feels odd as a Black person to be involved with the anti assisted
suicide movement. It feels lonely to be the only Black face in my local
group. I know that many people feel that I'm only a token.
It
has only been very recently that there has been any form of
conversation about the involvement of Blacks in the anti assisted
suicide/anti euthanasia movement. I can only guess at the reasons for
this. There needs to be far more conversations with, and outreach to the
black community.
My
presence as part of the movement is important and valuable. As we fight
potential ballot initiatives in our state that would legalize
euthanasia by lethal injection, Blacks will get caught up because due to
medical racism, the lives of Blacks are already seen as less worthy
than Whites. That's even more so with Blacks with disabilities. Our
families are pressured to withdraw life support for loved ones or we
fall under state's futility laws.
If
euthanasia and assisted suicide laws that aren't restricted to
terminally ill folks goes into law here in Colorado, Black folks will
surely join the movement as more and more of us are coerced into dying
by the medical establishment.
Even
if we win the fight in Colorado and defeat those ballot initiatives,
groups like Compassion and Choices, formerly, The Hemlock Society, and
other groups won't stop until there is assisted suicide, at the very
least, in Colorado.
As
more states try to legalize assisted suicide and euthanasia, we Blacks,
especially those of us with disabilities, will have to stop seeing this
as merely a privileged White people's issue and see that this touches
us too. We can't afford for the only voice in this to be White. We bring
a unique and valuable perspective to the movement that cannot be
understated.
I
call on both the Disability and the Black community around the nation
to come together and work on how we amplify Black voices and Black
participation in the anti assisted suicide movement. We must be in
solidarity with each other. Too many lives are at stake.