October 18, 2010

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Dr. Mildred Fay Jefferson, RIP
Part Two of Four

By Dave Andrusko

Good evening, and thanks for taking time to read Today's News & Views as we come to the end of the week. Parts One, Two, and Three are a tribute to Dr. Mildred Jefferson, who passed away Sunday. A former President of National Right to Life, she was a pioneer in our Movement. Part Four is the latest on Rep. Steve Dreihaus suit against a pro-life PAC. At National Right to Life News Today (www.nationalrighttolifenews.org), we celebrate the continuing decline in abortions in the state of Ohio, the good news that more people oppose ObamaCare, and then conclude with a look at a bizarre op-ed out of Australia. Please send your comments on Today's News & Views and National Right to Life News Today to daveandrusko@gmail.com. If you like, join those who are following me on Twitter at http://twitter.com/daveha.

Dr. Mildred Jefferson and Fr. Richard John Neuhaus at  
the 2008 NRLC  National Convention.

It was a remarkable moment: a flood of wonderful memories, competing with shock and astonishment.

My wife and I were driving back from Maryland on Sunday when the cell phone rang.

An old friend who formerly worked at NRLC was calling to ask us if we had heard.

Heard what, my wife asked? That Dr. Jefferson had died.

What? Mildred Jefferson is a force of nature, nigh on indestructible. Tiny in stature she had a commanding presence that demanded that you listen to her every word. She would be at the next NRLC board meeting as surely as the tide rolls in.

But Dr. Jefferson had died, sad news sent along by her close friend, Anne Fox, president of Massachusetts Citizens for Life. The news was almost unbelievable.

At 84 Dr. Jefferson had continued to serve our Movement as faithfully today as she had in the 1970s when she was first elected as vice-chairman of the NRLC board in June 1973. Given her eloquence and passion, it's no surprise that Mildred Jefferson then served as chairman of the board and then went on to serve three consecutive terms as NRLC president from 1975-1978.

She was, in every sense of the word, a pioneer in the Pro-Life Movement, a woman who was instrumental in establishing National Right to Life, the largest, most effective, and most representative pro-life organization in the world.

Even those who do not share our commitment to the unborn were awed by Mildred Jefferson's accomplishments. A very kind obituary written by Boston Globe staff writer began with "Dr. Mildred Jefferson, the first African-American woman to graduate from Harvard Medical School and the first female surgical intern at Boston City Hospital, broke many race and gender barriers during her long career as a doctor."

This shouldn't just be slightly acknowledged with a casual nod and passed by. In 1951, when she graduated from Harvard Medical School, it was highly unusual for a woman, let alone a woman of color, to apply for a surgical internship at Boston City Hospital. That same Globe profile points out that "She later became the first female doctor at the former Boston University Medical Center."

What a trailblazer!

A personal note. My involvement in our Movement began in the mid-1970s. Like so many of my peers, my initiation was reading the transformative book written by Dr. Jack Willke (later to serve as NRLC President), "Handbook on Abortion," and watching the astonishingly persuasive slide show he and Barbara, his wife, put together.

But as powerful as that combination was to me and to an entire generation of pro-lifers, it was a speech delivered by Mildred Jefferson that made the first indelible impression on me. It's 35 years or so ago, so I do not remember a single word.

What I do vividly remember, however, is the atmosphere in the room at that hotel in downtown St. Paul, Minnesota. I have been at just about every kind of gathering you can think of--from the academic and the political and the spiritual to pure entertainment--and never was the overused word 'electric' more appropriate.

Periodically, Mildred would call me with a very small request. "David?" she'd inquire, and I knew instantly who it was, so recognizable was her voice. It is very sad, indeed, to know that I will never hear that voice again.

Our Movement was blessed--is blessed--to have had Dr. Jefferson as one of our most important and representative leaders. As an African-American woman, she keenly understood the power of invidious discrimination. Nothing would irritate pro-abortionist more than when she compared the plight of the unborn to black people under slavery.

Please take a moment to read Part Three--the contents of an introduction she wrote as President for the NRLC Convention book in 1977. When you do, you will understand that Dr. Mildred Jefferson's passing is a reminder that our Movement rests on the shoulders of giants, even when they are barely 5 feet tall.

Please send your comments on Today's News & Views and National Right to Life News Today to daveandrusko@gmail.com. If you like, join those who are following me on Twitter at http://twitter.com/daveha.

Part Three
Part Four
Part One

www.nrlc.org