(I shared this on facebook as well, but there's a better chance of
meaningful discussion here)

I'm gobsmacked. A practising Catholic, planning to revolutionise birth
control. And she has a realistic chance of pulling it off. Strange times.

This (opposition to birth control) is the one biggest reason I believe
Catholic crusaders, such as Mother Theresa, are evil - not a word I use
lightly.

Discuss.

Udhay

http://www.thedailybeast.com/newsweek/2012/05/06/melinda-gates-new-crusade-investing-billions-in-women-s-health.html

Melinda Gates’ New Crusade: Investing Billions in Women's Health
May 7, 2012 1:00 AM EDT

She plans to use the Gates Foundation’s billions to revolutionize
contraception worldwide. The Catholic right is pushing back. Is she
ready for the political firestorm ahead?

In the 12 years since Melinda Gates and her husband, Bill, created the
Gates Foundation, the world’s largest philanthropic organization, she
has done a lot of traveling. A reserved woman who has long been wary of
the public glare attached to the Gates name, she comes alive, her
associates say, when she’s visiting the foundation’s projects in remote
corners of the world. “You get her out in the field with a group of
women, sitting on a mat or under a tree or in a hut, she is totally in
her element, totally comfortable,” says Gary Darmstadt, director of
family health at the foundation’s global health program.

Visiting vaccine programs in sub-Saharan Africa, Gates would often ask
women at remote clinics what else they needed. Very often, she says,
they would speak urgently about birth control. “Women sitting on a
bench, 20 of them, immediately they’ll start speaking out and saying, ‘I
wish I had that injection I used to get,’” says Gates. “‘I came to this
clinic three months ago, and I got my injection. I came last week, and I
couldn’t get it, and I’m here again.’”

They were talking about Depo-Provera, which is popular in many poor
countries because women need to take it only four times a year, and
because they can hide it, if necessary, from unsupportive husbands. As
Gates discovered, injectable contraceptives, like many other forms of
birth control, are frequently out of stock in clinics in the developing
world, a result of both funding shortages and supply-chain problems.

Women would tell her that they’d left their farms and walked for hours,
sometimes with children in tow, often without the knowledge of their
husbands, in their fruitless search for the shot. “I was just stunned by
how vociferous women were about what they wanted,” she says.

Because of those women, Gates made a decision that’s likely to change
lives all over the world. As she revealed in an exclusive interview with
Newsweek, she has decided to make family planning her signature issue
and primary public health a priority. “My goal is to get this back on
the global agenda,” she says. She is sitting in an office in the Gates
Foundation’s 900,000-square-foot headquarters in downtown Seattle, a
pair of airy boomerang-shaped buildings flooded with natural light. It
was here at headquarters late last year that she announced her new
emphasis on contraception at an all-staff meeting, to thrilled applause.

Now the foundation, which is worth almost $34 billion, is putting her
agenda into practice. In July it’s teaming up with the British
government to cosponsor a summit of world leaders in London, to start
raising the $4 billion the foundation says it will cost to get 120
million more women access to contraceptives by 2020. And in a move that
could be hugely significant for American women, it is pouring money into
the long-neglected field of contraceptive research, seeking entirely new
methods of birth control. Ultimately Gates hopes to galvanize a global
movement. “When I started to realize that that needed to get done in
family planning, I finally said, OK, I’m the person that’s going to do
that,” she says.

Despite Gates’s passion, stepping forward wasn’t an easy decision. For
one thing, the former Microsoft manager has always shunned the
spotlight. The first time she agreed to a magazine profile was in 2008,
14 years after her marriage, when she spoke to Fortune about the
foundation’s work. “I was reluctant to speak out on behalf of any
foundation issues early on, because I had little kids, and I wanted some
privacy in my family life,” she says.

Perhaps more importantly, there’s her Catholic faith, which has always
informed her work. “From the very beginning, we said that as a
foundation we will not support abortion, because we don’t believe in
funding it,” she says. She’s long disagreed with the church’s position
on contraception, and the Gates Foundation did some family-planning
funding early in its history. Still, she went through a lot of
soul-searching before she was ready to champion the issue publicly. “I
had to wrestle with which pieces of religion do I use and believe in my
life, what would I counsel my daughters to do,” she says. Defying church
teachings was difficult, she adds, but also came to seem morally
necessary. Otherwise, she says, “we’re not serving the other piece of
the Catholic mission, which is social justice.”

Gates believes that by focusing on the lives of women and children, and
by making it clear that the agenda is neither coercive population
control nor abortion, the controversy over international family-planning
programs can be defused. Right now, she points out, 100,000 women
annually die in childbirth after unintended pregnancies. Six hundred
thousand babies born to women who didn’t want to be pregnant die in the
first month of life. “She is somebody who really sees this as a
public-health necessity,” says Melanne Verveer, the United States
ambassador at large for global women’s issues. “I think she believes,
and I hope she is right, that people of different political persuasions
can come together on this issue.”

This may be overly optimistic. Her first public speech on the issue, at
a TEDxChange conference in Berlin in early April, was excoriated in the
right-wing Catholic press and on conservative Catholic blogs. “Melinda
Gates Promotes Abortion at Mtg, Attacks Catholics,” read a headline on
LifeNews.com. The U.K. Catholic Herald’s Francis Phillips was more
measured, saying, “It is always a disappointment when a public figure of
great wealth, standing or power explains that although they are loyal
Catholics they think Church teaching is wrong—predictably on moral matters.”

“You get her out in the field with a group of women, she is totally in
her element,” a foundation official says. (Courtesy of Bill & Melinda
Gates Foundation)

There was a time when creating worldwide access to birth control was a
thoroughly bipartisan endeavor, taken seriously at the highest levels of
American government. But that was before our politics were transformed
by 30 years of ideological warfare over sex and reproduction.

In the middle of the 20th century, global family planning was seen as an
issue of national security, not feminism. In the aftermath of World War
II, high birth rates and falling death rates in poor countries led to an
international panic about overpopulation, which many believed would
cause widespread instability, leaving countries vulnerable to communist
revolution. By the early 1960s, Dwight Eisenhower was calling for
foreign aid for birth control in The Saturday Evening Post, and he and
Harry Truman became honorary chairmen of Planned Parenthood. In 1965
President Lyndon Johnson implored the United Nations to “face
forthrightly the multiplying problems of our multiplying populations ...
Let us act on the fact that less than $5 invested in population control
is worth $100 invested in economic growth.”

Over the next 15 years, the U.S. led the world in a massive effort to
bring family planning to every corner of the globe. Powerful Americans
lobbied the United Nations to create the United Nations Fund for
Population Activities, or UNFPA, and then to expand its work. “Success
in the population field, under United Nations leadership, may ...
determine whether we can resolve successfully the other great questions
of peace, prosperity, and individual rights that face the world,” wrote
George H.W. Bush in 1973.

But population control led to terrible excesses. During the Indian
“emergency” that began in 1975, Prime Minister Indira Gandhi suspended
civil liberties, and her younger son, Sanjay, instituted a campaign of
mass, forcible sterilization. China instituted its coercive one-child
policy in 1979.

Women’s-rights activists challenged the population-control orthodoxy and
worked to redirect the resources behind it into family-planning programs
that prioritized women’s health. Meanwhile, the Malthusian doom that
experts prophesied in the 1960s and 1970s never came to pass, partly
thanks to massive investments in contraception and in agricultural
productivity. In the 1980s and 1990s, international family planning
increasingly became associated with feminism rather than national
security, making it subject to growing pressure from the ascendant
religious right.

In 1984 Ronald Reagan instituted the Mexico City policy, denying
American support for international organizations that perform abortions
or even counsel about them, cutting off funding to large parts of the
global family-planning infrastructure. In 1986 he cut off American
funding for UNFPA. Both policies were copied by succeeding Republican
administrations.

As a result of this intense politicization, American leadership on
global family planning diminished, and no other country fully replaced
it. Thus Gates, in her travels, discovered what she calls a “glaring
hole. Nobody was working really in a united way on contraception.”

Part of what Gates hopes to do is to re-create the former broad-based
consensus behind global family planning, but in a way that’s focused on
women’s needs rather than on demographics. “This is about empowering
women to be educated and to make a choice that they want to make,” she
says. “And if you look at what happens demographically because of that
choice, you then get some of these outcomes that people were hoping to
get worldwide.”

She seems convinced that empirical evidence about the public-health
benefits of birth control can overcome ideological objections. Indeed,
one of the themes of her initiative is “no controversy.” “Today, I’d
like to talk with you about something that should be a totally
uncontroversial topic,” her TEDxChange talk began. The foundation has
put up a website, NoControversy.TEDxChange.org, asking people to share
stories of how contraception has changed their lives. “There is no
controversy in raising your voice for equal access,” it says.

But controversy won’t be easily waved away. “If she wants to put money
into it, that’s fine, but she doesn’t get to say no one gets to argue
with me,” says Susan Yoshihara, director of research at the Catholic
Family and Human Rights Institute, a group that’s played a major role in
organizing international opposition to family-planning programs.
Yoshihara says any attempt to link contraception and maternal health is
“extremely controversial. You don’t tell a woman dying of an ectopic
pregnancy that she should have used a female condom. To say that we’re
going to help women not die in childbirth by telling them that they
shouldn’t get pregnant in the first place, I think, borders on scandalous.”

“My goal is to get this back on the global agenda.” (Nigel Parry for
Newsweek)

Such criticism will likely increase as the Gates Foundation becomes
known for its work in developing new forms of birth control. Right now,
it’s funding research into contraceptives that women could inject
themselves, sparing them onerous clinic trips. Aware that many women
reject the birth-control pill because of side effects, the foundation is
investing in a search for a contraceptive medication that works without
hormones, a “potential whole new class” of drug, says the Gates
Foundation’s Darmstadt.

Another of the “crazy ideas we’ve been dreaming about,” he says, “is
whether we could create an implantable device that would be
woman-controlled, and that you could put it in, and it could last her
reproductive lifetime.” She could turn it on and off at will, and it
would never need to be removed. “That’s something that I think every
woman everywhere in the world could potentially benefit from,” he says.

There’s currently very little investment in contraceptive research and
development. The single biggest funder, Darmstadt says, is the U.S.
government, through the National Institutes of Health. “It’s an area
that’s really kind of stagnated,” he says. “One of the things that we
see that we can do is to try to really stimulate that space.”

For reproductive-health advocates, this is terrific news. For some
conservatives, though, it will likely seem almost dystopian. Indeed, in
response to an item about contraceptive research on the Gates Foundation
website, The Catholic Herald’s Phillips wrote, “A horrid image comes to
mind, of white-coated boffins hard at work in diabolical laboratories,
devising new ways of depriving men and women of their conjugal dignity,
their culture and their traditions.”

Yet Gates can take comfort in the fact that even if the church hierarchy
and its traditionalists don’t support what she’s doing, plenty of
ordinary Catholics do. During her TEDxChange talk, she spoke of the
Ursuline nuns who taught at her Dallas Catholic high school, nuns who
“made service and social justice a high priority.” Through her work with
the foundation, Gates said, “I believe that I’m applying the lessons
that I learned in high school.”

Within an hour of returning to her hotel, she received a message from
some of those nuns. “It was fantastic,” she says, her eyes misting for a
moment. “They said, ‘We’re all for you. We know this is a difficult
issue to speak on, but we absolutely believe that you’re living under
Catholic values.’ And it was just so heartening.”


-- 
((Udhay Shankar N)) ((udhay @ pobox.com)) ((www.digeratus.com))

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