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    The New Verse News presents politically progressive poetry on current events and topical issues.

    Wednesday, January 18, 2017

    FUNERALS FOR FETUSES

    by Eliza Mimski


    This poster was created by Shepard Fairey who eight years ago made the iconic Obama poster that captured a period of HOPE in America. Today we are in a very different moment, one that requires new images that reject the hate, fear, and open racism that were normalized during the 2016 presidential campaign. So on Inauguration Day, We the People will flood Washington, DC with NEW symbols of hope. You can download the set of posters for free at: http://bit.ly/wtpdownloads. You can choose to support this We the People art project via Kickstarter.


    1969. Nineteen years old and pregnant.
    I couldn't afford to keep the baby.
    In those days, before Roe vs Wade,
    you had to prove to two psychiatrists
    that you were mentally unable to go through
    with the pregnancy.
    They wrote letters to the medical board of the
    hospital performing the abortion.
    Insurance didn't cover the psychiatric visits.

    The first psychiatrist asked if I would kill myself
    if I didn't have the abortion.
    I said yes, I would take my life,
    even though this wasn't true.
    He jotted some notes on a yellow legal pad.
    He asked me little else.
    The second psychiatrist asked if the sight of a penis
    frightened me. I said yes. I lied that the sight of a penis frightened me.
    He wrote that down.

    My fate was in their hands.
    They determined
    my future . . .

    The state of Texas now requires women
    who have abortions or miscarriages
    in hospitals,
    in abortion clinics
    or in other health facilities
    to bury or cremate the fetal remains.

    In Indiana, Mike Pence signed legislation
    to force women to have fetal funerals
    for abortions or miscarriages.
    This can be carried out by the facility.
    A name for the fetus during
    transport to the burial ground
    is not required.


    Eliza Mimski is a retired high school English teacher living in San Francisco. She is still coping with the election and the news by writing poetry. Her work has appeared in Quiet Lightning's Sparkle and Blink, Fiction 365, Poets Reading the News, and is forthcoming in Anti-Heroin Chic.

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