From NYT:
“'You Just Feel Like Nothing':
California to Pay Sterilization Victims”
(Leonard Bisel, 88, at his home
in Selah, Wash., on July 7, 2021.)
Leonard Bisel was 15 when the
state of California decided that he should not have children, threatening to
lock him up and force him to do hard labor if he did not submit to
sterilization. In the middle of his operation, recalled Bisel, now 88, he woke
up. “It was really painful,” he said, “and the doctor told me to shut up.” Under
the influence of a movement known as eugenics, whose supporters believed that
those with physical disabilities, psychiatric disorders and other conditions
were “genetically defective,” more than 60,000 people across the United States
were forcibly sterilized by state-run programs throughout the 20th century.
They included more than 20,000
people over seven decades in California, under a eugenics law enacted in 1909.
Almost all of the state’s procedures were performed through institutions, like
the one where Bisel lived, and none were legally required to have the patient’s
consent. Some of those sterilized were as young as 11. Even after California
repealed its eugenics law in 1979, it continued to sterilize women in prison,
sometimes without ensuring that their consent was lawfully obtained, according
to a 2014 state report that followed an exposé by the Center for Investigative
Reporting. Now, under a budget passed by the Legislature and awaiting the
governor’s approval, California is prepared to spend $7.5 million to find and
pay an estimated 600 surviving victims of coerced sterilization, both under the
eugenics law and in prison, an estimated $25,000 each. The move follows similar
efforts in Virginia and North Carolina to compensate victims of the eugenics
movement, which peaked in the United States in the early 20th century and
inspired similar practices in Nazi Germany. Thirty-two states had some sort of
federally funded program that forcibly sterilized immigrants, people of color,
those with disabilities and others labeled “undesirable,” under the guise of
public health.
Nationwide support for
reparations to descendants of enslaved people has grown in recent years,
including in California, where an effort is underway to develop proposals for
compensating Black residents for centuries of systemic discrimination and
inequality. Reparations to victims of involuntary sterilization is seen by some
advocates as a similar first step in acknowledging the country’s long history
of discrimination against people with disabilities. “There still is a great
amount of prejudice against people with disabilities and assumptions that they
are, in the most extreme form, not worthy of life, not worthy of being born and
certainly not worthy of parenting,” said Alexandra Minna Stern, a University of
Michigan professor who is an expert on eugenics and reproductive rights.
Not everyone who was forcibly
sterilized under California’s program had a disability. The vast majority were
poor, and many were wards of the state from so-called “broken homes.” Many had
suffered previous abuse, and many were Black, Latino, Asian American or Native
American. Bisel ended up in an institution called the Sonoma State Home in
Eldridge, California, after his father died; his mother had been previously
institutionalized and was unable to take care of him. He said he felt he had no
choice but to submit to sterilization. On his medical forms, he was labeled
“dull.” Records show that Bisel’s mother was also sterilized at the same
institution. “You just feel like nothing,” he said. “You’re not worth
anything.”
Bisel now lives in Selah,
Washington. He married, adopted two daughters and now has six grandchildren.
Under California’s reparations proposal, he would need to apply and be approved
for the money. Victims would have two years to come forward. Similar programs
in other states have had a tough time distributing money, in part because many
victims have died or have been difficult to track down. To try to overcome that
obstacle, part of the California budget proposal would provide the state’s
Victim Compensation Board with $2 million for outreach and collaboration with
social justice organizations. “The real shame to me is that politicians and the
public dragged their feet for decades in addressing this issue,” said Paul
Lombardo, a law professor at Georgia State University who has studied the
eugenics movement, “and now most of the people who would have benefited are
dead.” Assemblywoman Wendy Carrillo, a Democrat from Los Angeles, who supported
the reparations proposal, said she plans to seek justice for other victims of
systemic abuses — including those who were forcibly sterilized in settings not
run by the state, such as county hospitals or federal detention facilities.
Many of those victims in California were Latina. “It’s incredibly upsetting,
especially because these women could be my grandmother, they could be my mom,
they could be my neighbor,” said Carillo, who identifies as Mexican and
Salvadoran.
In North Carolina, the first
state to pay reparations for its decadeslong eugenics program, a significant
number of forcibly sterilized people were Black women like Elaine Riddick, now
67. She was 13 when she was raped, she said, and at 14, as she gave birth to
her son, the state sterilized her without her knowledge. In the paperwork, she
was called “feeble minded.” She did not find out until she was older, married
and trying to get pregnant. “That’s a very painful thing to find out that your
government allowed this to happen to you,” Riddick said. “For them to go inside
of you and wreck the inside of your body at such a young, tender age. My body
wasn’t even developed.” She eventually received close to $50,000 from North
Carolina’s reparations program, she said. But she added that she would rather
have had more children.
^ I believe any person who was
forcibly sterilized in any State deserves an apology and compensation. It was
wrong for Government Officials and Medical Staff to do it and while the physical
and emotional damage will never be fixed at least the victims will get
something. ^
https://www.yahoo.com/news/just-feel-nothing-california-pay-181152942.html
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.