{"id":11115,"date":"2012-09-15T19:14:18","date_gmt":"2012-09-15T23:14:18","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.albany.com\/midwifery-blog\/2012\/09\/freedom-for-birth-premiere-92012.html"},"modified":"2017-11-08T11:53:22","modified_gmt":"2017-11-08T16:53:22","slug":"freedom-for-birth-premiere-92012","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.albany.com\/midwifery-blog\/2012\/09\/freedom-for-birth-premiere-92012\/","title":{"rendered":"Freedom For Birth Premiere 9\/20\/12"},"content":{"rendered":"

Last night, I previewed the film Freedom For Birth<\/b> by Toni and Alex Harmon. The film explores the idea that childbirth is a human right, an innate right of women to choose where and how they give birth. The film explores this topic by highlighting two women, one a midwife in Hungary, jailed for attending home births and the second a woman who sued the country of Hungary for not allowing home birth. Her case, Ternovsky versus Hungary<\/b> was heard in the European Court of Human Rights and it was decided that, yes, we have a human right to this choice and to have our choice supported by the State.<\/p>\n

Do you believe a woman has the right to chose where she will birth? In the European Union, the high court says she does. What about women in America? What about women in Sub-Sahara Africa? What about women in Haiti? What questions does this issue raise for you?<\/p>\n

After viewing the film, I was confronted with many questions percolating within me, questions that were societal, legal and deeply personal.<\/p>\n

Issues and stories of women’s choices at the beginning of pregnancy (such as contraception and abortion) make front page news and are featured in political platforms. The questions generated by these early pregnancy issues are often seen as lines in the sand, lines that cannot be crossed for fear of joining the other side.<\/p>\n

The stories and the very important issues around the end of pregnancy (such as childbirth) appear on blog and Facebook posts, generally finding the same audience again and again. Like preaching to the choir on Sunday, these posts are read by folks that are already ‘converted’. As with the issues related to earlier in pregnancy, these questions are hardly ever fully explored.<\/p>\n

Even now, the morning after viewing Freedom For Birth, I ponder. There are so many subsequent questions that arise for me:<\/p>\n