1 00:00:02,880 --> 00:00:06,840 Speaker 1: And right now people, I think especially need to learn 2 00:00:06,840 --> 00:00:10,600 Speaker 1: this lesson that even when time seemed the most difficult, 3 00:00:11,400 --> 00:00:15,880 Speaker 1: we can make progress if we organized, and if we organized, 4 00:00:15,920 --> 00:00:19,360 Speaker 1: we can change the world. And we need to change 5 00:00:19,360 --> 00:00:26,880 Speaker 1: the world. There are No Girls on the Internet. As 6 00:00:26,880 --> 00:00:33,800 Speaker 1: a production of I Heart Radio and Unboss Creative, I'm 7 00:00:33,840 --> 00:00:35,800 Speaker 1: Bridget Toad and this is there Are No Girls on 8 00:00:35,840 --> 00:00:40,880 Speaker 1: the Internet. In the wake of the devastating Supreme Court 9 00:00:40,920 --> 00:00:44,120 Speaker 1: decision over twnting Row versus Wade, the Supreme Court decision 10 00:00:44,120 --> 00:00:46,960 Speaker 1: that legalized abortion in the United States, I've been thinking 11 00:00:46,960 --> 00:00:49,960 Speaker 1: a lot about the Jain Collective and Heather Booths today. 12 00:00:50,320 --> 00:00:52,879 Speaker 1: Heather Booth is seventy six years young, and when she 13 00:00:53,000 --> 00:00:56,400 Speaker 1: was a young student in Chicago, she started the Jain Collective, 14 00:00:56,560 --> 00:01:00,000 Speaker 1: an underground network that provided some eleven thousand abortions from 15 00:01:00,040 --> 00:01:02,840 Speaker 1: nineteen sixty nine to nineteen seventy three, at a time 16 00:01:02,840 --> 00:01:05,600 Speaker 1: when abortion was illegal and most of the United States. 17 00:01:06,319 --> 00:01:08,880 Speaker 1: I spoke to Heather back in when I was the 18 00:01:08,880 --> 00:01:11,400 Speaker 1: host of the podcast Stuff Mom Never Told You, and 19 00:01:11,400 --> 00:01:14,399 Speaker 1: we're listening to her story this week. I was reminded 20 00:01:14,400 --> 00:01:16,800 Speaker 1: that when she was young, she was organizing to make 21 00:01:16,880 --> 00:01:21,080 Speaker 1: changes that must have seemed super far fetched until they weren't. 22 00:01:21,520 --> 00:01:24,119 Speaker 1: It's a story of hope and promise and I feel 23 00:01:24,120 --> 00:01:26,200 Speaker 1: like we could all use a little of that right now. 24 00:01:26,880 --> 00:01:29,560 Speaker 1: And just f y I I was a much greener 25 00:01:29,600 --> 00:01:33,679 Speaker 1: interviewer and podcast host back in so you know, keep 26 00:01:33,720 --> 00:01:41,840 Speaker 1: that in mind as you're listening. Hey, this is Bridget 27 00:01:42,120 --> 00:01:55,880 Speaker 1: and you're listening to stuff mom ever told you. And 28 00:01:56,040 --> 00:01:59,360 Speaker 1: today we're continuing our series all about abortion, brtting you 29 00:01:59,400 --> 00:02:01,200 Speaker 1: stories about a portion that you might not know about. 30 00:02:01,880 --> 00:02:05,400 Speaker 1: And today's story is the Jain Collective. Now I want 31 00:02:05,440 --> 00:02:08,880 Speaker 1: you to imagine it's nineteen seventy you're pregnant and you 32 00:02:08,919 --> 00:02:11,160 Speaker 1: need not to be but row of you Aide is 33 00:02:11,160 --> 00:02:13,880 Speaker 1: a few years away. An abortion is still illegal now. 34 00:02:13,919 --> 00:02:18,200 Speaker 1: Before this landmark nineteen seventy three Supreme Court decision, terminating 35 00:02:18,200 --> 00:02:20,560 Speaker 1: a pregnancy meant taking a gamble on a back alley 36 00:02:20,560 --> 00:02:24,320 Speaker 1: abortion provider. Maybe they'd be competent, maybe they wouldn't be. 37 00:02:24,880 --> 00:02:27,160 Speaker 1: But when you're pregnant and desperate, you don't really have 38 00:02:27,160 --> 00:02:29,480 Speaker 1: a lot of options. For women living in the sixties 39 00:02:29,480 --> 00:02:32,720 Speaker 1: and seventies, this was a reality. And then on Chicago 40 00:02:32,880 --> 00:02:36,200 Speaker 1: South Side, women began organizing an underground network to do 41 00:02:36,240 --> 00:02:39,960 Speaker 1: something about it. In nineteen sixty five, Heather Booth was 42 00:02:39,960 --> 00:02:42,760 Speaker 1: a nineteen year old college student at the University of Chicago. 43 00:02:43,160 --> 00:02:45,960 Speaker 1: Her friend's sister was pregnant and needed an abortion. Now, 44 00:02:46,000 --> 00:02:48,040 Speaker 1: Booth had been active in the civil rights movement and 45 00:02:48,040 --> 00:02:50,560 Speaker 1: connected her friend's sister to a doctor willing to perform 46 00:02:50,600 --> 00:02:53,920 Speaker 1: an a legal abortion. After that, she started getting more 47 00:02:53,919 --> 00:02:57,680 Speaker 1: and more calls from women, housewives, students, and the siblings 48 00:02:57,680 --> 00:03:00,959 Speaker 1: of police officers. That's when Booth knew she needed to 49 00:03:00,960 --> 00:03:04,359 Speaker 1: start a network, known officially as the Abortion Counseling Service 50 00:03:04,400 --> 00:03:07,520 Speaker 1: of Women's Liberation. Heather Booth started an underground network to 51 00:03:07,520 --> 00:03:11,480 Speaker 1: connect women to abortions, using the code name Jane. As 52 00:03:11,520 --> 00:03:14,400 Speaker 1: it was still a crime. I remember this ad that 53 00:03:14,520 --> 00:03:20,359 Speaker 1: said pregnant need help, called Jane, So I called Jane. 54 00:03:20,840 --> 00:03:23,880 Speaker 1: Jane ultimately served over ten thousand women before a Row 55 00:03:23,880 --> 00:03:27,640 Speaker 1: of View Wade made abortion legal in nineteen In the beginning, 56 00:03:28,040 --> 00:03:31,440 Speaker 1: the network connected pregnant women with doctors, but eventually they 57 00:03:31,480 --> 00:03:34,400 Speaker 1: realized that many of the people providing abortions weren't doctors 58 00:03:34,400 --> 00:03:36,920 Speaker 1: at all. That's when the women and Jane started performing 59 00:03:36,920 --> 00:03:40,720 Speaker 1: abortions themselves. The women were not doctors, but according to 60 00:03:40,760 --> 00:03:43,880 Speaker 1: the Chicago Tribune, their skills were attested to by a 61 00:03:43,920 --> 00:03:46,960 Speaker 1: doctor who risked his license by doing post operative checkups 62 00:03:46,960 --> 00:03:50,120 Speaker 1: on clients. At this point, the Jane Collective was providing 63 00:03:50,160 --> 00:03:52,800 Speaker 1: abortions for as many as sixty women a week. Jane's 64 00:03:52,840 --> 00:03:55,760 Speaker 1: facilities were rated by the police. During the raid, police 65 00:03:55,800 --> 00:03:57,960 Speaker 1: asked all the women identified the doctor who was performing 66 00:03:57,960 --> 00:04:01,000 Speaker 1: the abortions, obviously expecting to find a man, but there 67 00:04:01,080 --> 00:04:03,960 Speaker 1: was no man. The group was arrested and the media 68 00:04:04,000 --> 00:04:07,160 Speaker 1: called them the Jane Seven. After being indicted by a 69 00:04:07,160 --> 00:04:10,000 Speaker 1: grand jury, their case was only dismissed thanks to the 70 00:04:10,000 --> 00:04:14,200 Speaker 1: Supreme Courts legalization of abortion in nineteen After this quick break, 71 00:04:14,680 --> 00:04:25,200 Speaker 1: we'll hear from Heather Booth about how Jane got started. Today. 72 00:04:25,240 --> 00:04:28,840 Speaker 1: I am so so humbled and thrilled to be joined 73 00:04:28,880 --> 00:04:31,640 Speaker 1: by the legendary Heather Booth. Heather, thank you so much 74 00:04:31,640 --> 00:04:36,520 Speaker 1: for being your dying well you are your your a legend. Well, 75 00:04:36,560 --> 00:04:39,520 Speaker 1: I'm so glad to be talking with the amazing bridget 76 00:04:39,640 --> 00:04:42,279 Speaker 1: Todd and what a service you're doing for the public 77 00:04:42,360 --> 00:04:46,200 Speaker 1: providing this information out about some of the stories that 78 00:04:46,240 --> 00:04:49,000 Speaker 1: are not as well known exactly, that's really what we 79 00:04:49,040 --> 00:04:51,280 Speaker 1: want to do with this series. Everybody feels like they 80 00:04:51,320 --> 00:04:54,839 Speaker 1: know a lot about abortion and about you know, reproductive health, 81 00:04:55,160 --> 00:04:58,799 Speaker 1: but there are so many stories about abortion in choice 82 00:04:58,960 --> 00:05:01,680 Speaker 1: that people might not. Oh, you know, the Jane Network 83 00:05:01,760 --> 00:05:04,880 Speaker 1: was such a critical thing for these women who were living, 84 00:05:05,040 --> 00:05:08,400 Speaker 1: you know, while before Reviewade was enacted, and you know, 85 00:05:08,440 --> 00:05:12,240 Speaker 1: people don't even really know about it. Glad to describe 86 00:05:12,560 --> 00:05:17,200 Speaker 1: of how it came about and and Uh, I appreciate 87 00:05:17,279 --> 00:05:22,320 Speaker 1: your spreading the word to let people know that if 88 00:05:22,360 --> 00:05:27,120 Speaker 1: we organize, we can change the world. We have changed 89 00:05:27,160 --> 00:05:29,719 Speaker 1: the world, and we need to change the world and 90 00:05:29,760 --> 00:05:33,520 Speaker 1: the story of organizing the Jane Network is one important 91 00:05:33,520 --> 00:05:36,520 Speaker 1: example of that. So let's talk about Jane. So when 92 00:05:36,560 --> 00:05:39,039 Speaker 1: you started Jane, you were just a nineteen year old 93 00:05:39,040 --> 00:05:41,479 Speaker 1: student at the University of Chicago. So what was your 94 00:05:41,520 --> 00:05:44,720 Speaker 1: life like before you started Jane? Say a little bit 95 00:05:44,720 --> 00:05:46,960 Speaker 1: about my life and also a little bit about what 96 00:05:47,040 --> 00:05:52,040 Speaker 1: women's lives were like in general. H For me, I 97 00:05:52,120 --> 00:05:55,720 Speaker 1: was brought up in a family UH that was very 98 00:05:55,800 --> 00:05:59,960 Speaker 1: loving and believe that people should follow the Golden rule. 99 00:06:00,080 --> 00:06:03,039 Speaker 1: We should treat each other as we wanted to be treated, 100 00:06:03,960 --> 00:06:07,560 Speaker 1: and I carried that with me. I became active in 101 00:06:07,560 --> 00:06:10,680 Speaker 1: the civil rights movement. In nineteen sixty four, I went 102 00:06:10,680 --> 00:06:13,760 Speaker 1: to Mississippi with the Freedom Summer Project, and some of 103 00:06:13,800 --> 00:06:15,840 Speaker 1: you may have heard about it, because that was the 104 00:06:15,960 --> 00:06:21,080 Speaker 1: time when the civil rights movement was recruiting northern students 105 00:06:21,120 --> 00:06:25,480 Speaker 1: to come down to Mississippi because in Mississippi, black lives 106 00:06:25,520 --> 00:06:29,120 Speaker 1: did not matter in nineteen sixty four, and they thought 107 00:06:29,200 --> 00:06:34,760 Speaker 1: that the attention of northern students might bring additional visibility 108 00:06:35,320 --> 00:06:40,479 Speaker 1: and potential power to shine a spotlight on what was 109 00:06:40,520 --> 00:06:43,400 Speaker 1: going on in Mississippi. And during that summer, the three 110 00:06:43,440 --> 00:06:48,200 Speaker 1: young men, Andrew Goodman, James Cheney, and Michael Schwerner were 111 00:06:48,279 --> 00:06:50,880 Speaker 1: killed at the hands of the clan. What people may 112 00:06:50,920 --> 00:06:55,080 Speaker 1: not know is that while they were looking for the 113 00:06:55,080 --> 00:06:57,880 Speaker 1: bodies of the three men, they found bodies of other 114 00:06:57,960 --> 00:07:00,840 Speaker 1: black men whose hands have been bound or feet chopped off, 115 00:07:01,320 --> 00:07:04,680 Speaker 1: and those murders weren't even investigated once the bodies were 116 00:07:04,680 --> 00:07:10,800 Speaker 1: found until years later. But because people organized, there was 117 00:07:10,840 --> 00:07:14,440 Speaker 1: a voting right back within a year, and Mississippi now 118 00:07:14,560 --> 00:07:17,440 Speaker 1: is more African American elected officials than any other state 119 00:07:17,480 --> 00:07:21,560 Speaker 1: in the country. And mentioned that because it was formative 120 00:07:22,160 --> 00:07:25,240 Speaker 1: for some of the ideas that led to Jane, which 121 00:07:25,240 --> 00:07:28,400 Speaker 1: is that you have to stand up to unjust authority. 122 00:07:29,040 --> 00:07:32,680 Speaker 1: If you take action, you can make change, and that 123 00:07:32,840 --> 00:07:38,200 Speaker 1: sometimes there even are risks, but together we can really 124 00:07:38,240 --> 00:07:41,960 Speaker 1: build a better world. I returned back to my campus 125 00:07:42,040 --> 00:07:44,400 Speaker 1: and a friend of mine had been raped at nice 126 00:07:44,480 --> 00:07:49,120 Speaker 1: point in her bed in off campus housing. We went 127 00:07:49,440 --> 00:07:52,400 Speaker 1: with her to Students Help to get a gynecological exam 128 00:07:52,480 --> 00:07:55,480 Speaker 1: for her, but was told that Students Help didn't cover 129 00:07:55,560 --> 00:08:00,720 Speaker 1: gynecological exam and she was given a lecture on the promiscuity. Now, 130 00:08:00,760 --> 00:08:03,080 Speaker 1: because we sat with her, they called it to sit in. 131 00:08:04,080 --> 00:08:08,840 Speaker 1: But over time, because people protested and organized, now student 132 00:08:09,000 --> 00:08:12,640 Speaker 1: health would cover gynecological exams and people would be given 133 00:08:13,240 --> 00:08:20,280 Speaker 1: careful comforting counseling, and there also is UH support and 134 00:08:20,320 --> 00:08:24,440 Speaker 1: attention about the crisis of rape on campus. Those changes 135 00:08:24,520 --> 00:08:29,440 Speaker 1: happen because people organized. We still look much further to go. 136 00:08:30,880 --> 00:08:35,480 Speaker 1: There's still our attacks on women's health plan parents that 137 00:08:35,640 --> 00:08:39,559 Speaker 1: is under attack, but we make progress when we organized. 138 00:08:40,320 --> 00:08:42,280 Speaker 1: And those were some of the lessons that I learned 139 00:08:42,320 --> 00:08:46,559 Speaker 1: also from the civil rights movement on the campus. To 140 00:08:46,600 --> 00:08:52,439 Speaker 1: give a sense of how women retreated broadly, UM, I 141 00:08:52,559 --> 00:08:57,160 Speaker 1: formed a pulled together a group called the Women Radical 142 00:08:57,200 --> 00:09:00,719 Speaker 1: Action Program or wrapped w r a c H, and 143 00:09:01,840 --> 00:09:07,800 Speaker 1: we did studies about UM and supported women to promote 144 00:09:07,800 --> 00:09:12,360 Speaker 1: women's positions on campus. It's probably was the first campus 145 00:09:12,360 --> 00:09:16,640 Speaker 1: women's organization of the new and emerging women's movement in 146 00:09:16,880 --> 00:09:26,240 Speaker 1: nine and we found that professors gave four times as 147 00:09:26,360 --> 00:09:30,880 Speaker 1: much attention to men's students as to women's students, called 148 00:09:30,880 --> 00:09:34,840 Speaker 1: a significant response how often would a teacher actually engage 149 00:09:34,920 --> 00:09:39,640 Speaker 1: with the students? And because of that and other things, 150 00:09:39,640 --> 00:09:43,679 Speaker 1: we found ways to support women on campus. UM. The 151 00:09:43,800 --> 00:09:49,040 Speaker 1: club founding was discrimination against women's faculty members, as they 152 00:09:49,080 --> 00:09:53,200 Speaker 1: mostly were kept as adjunct professors and not allowed on 153 00:09:53,240 --> 00:09:55,920 Speaker 1: a tenure track, and there were other issues that people 154 00:09:55,960 --> 00:10:00,280 Speaker 1: need to understand. The emergence of Jane which in the 155 00:10:00,400 --> 00:10:05,880 Speaker 1: context of lessons from an emerging movement in civil rights, 156 00:10:08,200 --> 00:10:13,800 Speaker 1: context of UM, changes going on in the society where 157 00:10:14,040 --> 00:10:18,240 Speaker 1: on the one hand, women were at the universities and 158 00:10:19,040 --> 00:10:22,960 Speaker 1: entering into public life, and yet we're not treated equally. 159 00:10:23,040 --> 00:10:27,559 Speaker 1: So there was this emerging women's movement developing, and also 160 00:10:27,600 --> 00:10:33,400 Speaker 1: in the context of values that many of us shared, 161 00:10:33,960 --> 00:10:38,000 Speaker 1: believing that there should be a country that treated all 162 00:10:38,080 --> 00:10:46,000 Speaker 1: people equally, gave people equal support, and and respect. I 163 00:10:46,080 --> 00:10:48,920 Speaker 1: love that. So really one of the big hickaways from 164 00:10:48,960 --> 00:10:52,600 Speaker 1: what you've done with change is that organizing and people 165 00:10:52,640 --> 00:10:56,360 Speaker 1: power can really change culture and change laws and change 166 00:10:56,440 --> 00:11:00,160 Speaker 1: lives that you know, oftentimes we feel, at least I 167 00:11:00,200 --> 00:11:02,679 Speaker 1: feel overwhelmed that oh, just little on me. What can 168 00:11:02,720 --> 00:11:05,080 Speaker 1: I do to change this? This seems so batter up 169 00:11:05,120 --> 00:11:07,600 Speaker 1: against so many fights. But actually if you're if you 170 00:11:07,640 --> 00:11:11,840 Speaker 1: really work hard and organized, you can change things. Absolutely 171 00:11:12,400 --> 00:11:16,080 Speaker 1: absolutely to bring us up to Jane to explain how 172 00:11:17,080 --> 00:11:24,160 Speaker 1: my involvement with that and how that developed against this backdrop, um, 173 00:11:24,200 --> 00:11:27,000 Speaker 1: a friend of mine told me if the sister was 174 00:11:27,080 --> 00:11:30,880 Speaker 1: pregnant and was nearly suicidal because she wasn't ready to 175 00:11:30,920 --> 00:11:35,640 Speaker 1: have a baby and she wanted an abortion, I have 176 00:11:35,800 --> 00:11:39,240 Speaker 1: never thought about the issue before that, I recall, and 177 00:11:39,320 --> 00:11:43,040 Speaker 1: I've never had to face the issue myself, but I said, 178 00:11:43,040 --> 00:11:45,440 Speaker 1: I tried to do what I could do to help again, 179 00:11:45,520 --> 00:11:49,319 Speaker 1: sort as part of the golden rule, trying to go 180 00:11:49,400 --> 00:11:54,760 Speaker 1: one to others. I went to the network of doctors 181 00:11:54,800 --> 00:11:58,200 Speaker 1: from the Medical Committee for Human Rights, which was the 182 00:11:58,440 --> 00:12:03,440 Speaker 1: civil rights met go arms, and I found a doctor, 183 00:12:03,800 --> 00:12:08,520 Speaker 1: Dr TRM. Howard, who had a clinic on sixty three 184 00:12:08,640 --> 00:12:14,199 Speaker 1: Street in Chicago Friendship Clinic um. I didn't know its 185 00:12:14,280 --> 00:12:18,079 Speaker 1: history at the time, but he had been a dynamic 186 00:12:18,200 --> 00:12:23,240 Speaker 1: civil rights leader in Mississippi and came to Chicago when 187 00:12:23,360 --> 00:12:27,880 Speaker 1: his name appeared on a clan death list. I called 188 00:12:27,960 --> 00:12:31,480 Speaker 1: him up. He agreed to do the procedure. Actually, I 189 00:12:31,520 --> 00:12:35,200 Speaker 1: didn't really think much more about it, but word must 190 00:12:35,200 --> 00:12:40,840 Speaker 1: have spread because short time later someone else called. It 191 00:12:40,880 --> 00:12:43,720 Speaker 1: was a coincidence, and then where it must have spread 192 00:12:43,760 --> 00:12:47,160 Speaker 1: and someone else called. At that point I realized they 193 00:12:47,200 --> 00:12:52,120 Speaker 1: really was a broader problem that needed to be addressed, 194 00:12:52,960 --> 00:12:56,440 Speaker 1: and being an organizer, I decided to create a system 195 00:12:56,480 --> 00:13:01,880 Speaker 1: and called it Jane. Over time, the women of Jane 196 00:13:02,040 --> 00:13:11,080 Speaker 1: themselves performed eleven thousand abortions between nineteen and seventy three, 197 00:13:11,440 --> 00:13:16,000 Speaker 1: when Roe became the law of the land and the 198 00:13:16,080 --> 00:13:20,920 Speaker 1: experience of Jane both improve the lives of the women 199 00:13:20,960 --> 00:13:23,280 Speaker 1: who came through who are looking for a way to 200 00:13:23,920 --> 00:13:28,520 Speaker 1: decide when or whether they could have a child. It 201 00:13:28,720 --> 00:13:32,560 Speaker 1: changed the lives of the women who were in Jane, 202 00:13:34,240 --> 00:13:39,000 Speaker 1: letting them know what they could do to improve the 203 00:13:39,080 --> 00:13:43,680 Speaker 1: lives of women on a broad scale, and it also 204 00:13:44,200 --> 00:13:49,040 Speaker 1: provided a basis giving people confidence. I hope now to 205 00:13:49,120 --> 00:13:54,920 Speaker 1: say we can make change if we organize. So let's 206 00:13:54,920 --> 00:13:56,959 Speaker 1: say that I'm a woman who calls Jane. Can you 207 00:13:57,000 --> 00:14:00,839 Speaker 1: walk me through the logistics once I call? What happened? Well, first, 208 00:14:00,840 --> 00:14:05,120 Speaker 1: there were too UM kind of two or three eras 209 00:14:05,200 --> 00:14:10,160 Speaker 1: of Jane the Hero's UM. When I first started it, 210 00:14:10,880 --> 00:14:14,480 Speaker 1: it was a very small service. It just kept growing 211 00:14:14,520 --> 00:14:18,680 Speaker 1: and growing. When it started, someone would call up and 212 00:14:18,720 --> 00:14:22,840 Speaker 1: ask for Jane. And even before they said they were 213 00:14:23,040 --> 00:14:26,040 Speaker 1: asking for Jane, I knew immediately there was a sort 214 00:14:26,040 --> 00:14:28,600 Speaker 1: of hesitant pause on the phone, and I just knew 215 00:14:28,600 --> 00:14:34,960 Speaker 1: immediately what they were probably calling about. UM. They'd say 216 00:14:35,000 --> 00:14:41,080 Speaker 1: what that They usually said some version that they were pregnant, UM, 217 00:14:41,120 --> 00:14:44,840 Speaker 1: and we're looking for an abortion for some women. We 218 00:14:45,080 --> 00:14:48,760 Speaker 1: do the counseling on the phone. We then trying to 219 00:14:48,840 --> 00:14:51,520 Speaker 1: arrange a time where they could come in and have 220 00:14:51,680 --> 00:14:56,640 Speaker 1: a longer conversation and could talk with them and find 221 00:14:56,680 --> 00:15:02,840 Speaker 1: out what the details were, long they were had been pregnant, 222 00:15:03,000 --> 00:15:06,160 Speaker 1: what the medical history was a little bit UM, and 223 00:15:06,200 --> 00:15:12,240 Speaker 1: then we'll just go through the detail of what to expect. UM. 224 00:15:14,800 --> 00:15:17,120 Speaker 1: They want to know what how long does it take? 225 00:15:17,160 --> 00:15:20,480 Speaker 1: Would there be pain? There's side effects? What do you 226 00:15:20,520 --> 00:15:23,760 Speaker 1: need to do afterwards, how to take care of yourself 227 00:15:23,800 --> 00:15:30,120 Speaker 1: if there are any uh medical complications, what they need 228 00:15:30,200 --> 00:15:33,280 Speaker 1: to do, who they call. We go through how much 229 00:15:33,320 --> 00:15:38,640 Speaker 1: it cost. Initially Jane costs five dollars um, though we 230 00:15:38,720 --> 00:15:41,480 Speaker 1: negotiated down the price that the number of people came 231 00:15:41,520 --> 00:15:44,840 Speaker 1: through and then went for two for the price of one. 232 00:15:45,000 --> 00:15:48,120 Speaker 1: That we got it down to two fifty dollars. Then 233 00:15:48,200 --> 00:15:51,880 Speaker 1: even sometimes got three for the price of one. We 234 00:15:52,120 --> 00:15:58,160 Speaker 1: sometimes I would ask for special arrangement if someone didn't 235 00:15:58,200 --> 00:16:06,640 Speaker 1: have money and h and then we arranged where people 236 00:16:06,680 --> 00:16:09,360 Speaker 1: would go, where they would meet, how they would get 237 00:16:09,360 --> 00:16:13,280 Speaker 1: picked up, Um, that someone should be with them to 238 00:16:14,920 --> 00:16:18,280 Speaker 1: care of them, um, you know, to be with them 239 00:16:18,320 --> 00:16:23,960 Speaker 1: as they as they left after the procedure. That was 240 00:16:24,000 --> 00:16:28,000 Speaker 1: the first stage of Jane, where I was doing the 241 00:16:28,080 --> 00:16:31,240 Speaker 1: counseling and Dr Howard had explained to me in a 242 00:16:31,280 --> 00:16:38,720 Speaker 1: lot of detail what was involved. Dr Howard died natural 243 00:16:38,760 --> 00:16:43,440 Speaker 1: causes and I found another person to provide the procedures. 244 00:16:43,880 --> 00:16:50,880 Speaker 1: His name was Mike, and we've basically had the same process, 245 00:16:51,240 --> 00:16:59,600 Speaker 1: though he had a suburban effort and m the numbers 246 00:16:59,600 --> 00:17:03,520 Speaker 1: weren't creasing so much as the numbers of people coming through. 247 00:17:04,800 --> 00:17:08,240 Speaker 1: I was about to have my first child, and I 248 00:17:08,359 --> 00:17:11,720 Speaker 1: was very busy and many other things, getting a graduate 249 00:17:11,760 --> 00:17:17,520 Speaker 1: degree UM, working on other social change issues, and I 250 00:17:17,560 --> 00:17:21,960 Speaker 1: realized I couldn't handle it all just myself, and so 251 00:17:22,560 --> 00:17:26,280 Speaker 1: I decided I needed to recruit other people to be 252 00:17:26,359 --> 00:17:30,640 Speaker 1: involved with this, and I go to meetings and at 253 00:17:30,640 --> 00:17:32,800 Speaker 1: the end of the meeting would say, if anyone wants 254 00:17:32,880 --> 00:17:39,680 Speaker 1: to be involved in abortion counseling, please see me. And 255 00:17:39,800 --> 00:17:42,560 Speaker 1: I recruited a number of people. We did a training 256 00:17:43,320 --> 00:17:47,040 Speaker 1: and made sure that everyone understood the process and would 257 00:17:47,080 --> 00:17:50,800 Speaker 1: provide the high quality of care that we wanted to 258 00:17:50,840 --> 00:17:54,919 Speaker 1: see for all the women who came through UM. And 259 00:17:54,960 --> 00:17:59,520 Speaker 1: then with that I turned over the effort to another 260 00:17:59,560 --> 00:18:04,720 Speaker 1: group of women UM Jodie Parsons and Ruth Circle with 261 00:18:04,800 --> 00:18:10,199 Speaker 1: the two leagues women who helped coordinate it. At that point, 262 00:18:11,440 --> 00:18:16,800 Speaker 1: as the numbers increased, more hands were needed. One person 263 00:18:16,840 --> 00:18:21,040 Speaker 1: doing the procedures wasn't going to be enough. And then 264 00:18:22,760 --> 00:18:26,479 Speaker 1: it also turned out that the women that were helping 265 00:18:27,640 --> 00:18:32,320 Speaker 1: might do the procedures. And then Mike shared that he 266 00:18:32,440 --> 00:18:36,920 Speaker 1: actually wasn't a license position, and they thought, well, if 267 00:18:36,960 --> 00:18:41,240 Speaker 1: he could do it, so could they. Now though this 268 00:18:41,600 --> 00:18:45,320 Speaker 1: was the women doing the procedures, starting to learn how 269 00:18:45,359 --> 00:18:51,240 Speaker 1: to do the procedures. It was actually probably safer than 270 00:18:52,200 --> 00:18:55,959 Speaker 1: this medical procedure being done in a hospital or clinic 271 00:18:56,040 --> 00:19:02,080 Speaker 1: or other settings. Partly because it was illegal, UH. Everyone 272 00:19:02,160 --> 00:19:05,080 Speaker 1: wanted it to be as states as possible so that 273 00:19:05,119 --> 00:19:08,800 Speaker 1: no one would be hard, no one would be UH, 274 00:19:09,080 --> 00:19:12,920 Speaker 1: they wouldn't be a h an adverse effect. It also 275 00:19:12,960 --> 00:19:16,240 Speaker 1: was a women's culture who cared about women, and so 276 00:19:16,359 --> 00:19:20,200 Speaker 1: the priority wasn't the profit making, it was the care 277 00:19:20,280 --> 00:19:29,119 Speaker 1: for women and for their wishes. They're also UM. It 278 00:19:29,280 --> 00:19:31,879 Speaker 1: was the only thing that they were doing, and so 279 00:19:32,000 --> 00:19:33,720 Speaker 1: there was a lot of attention on it. It's not 280 00:19:33,760 --> 00:19:36,440 Speaker 1: like you were getting lost in the shuffle of oh, 281 00:19:36,600 --> 00:19:40,760 Speaker 1: am I doing an app inductivity or am i UH 282 00:19:41,000 --> 00:19:49,000 Speaker 1: doing a different procedures UM. In fact, at the after 283 00:19:50,280 --> 00:19:51,920 Speaker 1: row became the law of the land. That was a 284 00:19:52,000 --> 00:19:57,240 Speaker 1: study done by University of Illinois program called it Prospectorship, 285 00:19:58,080 --> 00:20:05,160 Speaker 1: which was about entry into UH positive medical care within Chicago, 286 00:20:05,400 --> 00:20:09,479 Speaker 1: and they did an analysis of the outcome from JANE 287 00:20:09,800 --> 00:20:14,560 Speaker 1: and the outcomes from clinic service for abortion and found 288 00:20:14,560 --> 00:20:19,159 Speaker 1: that the results from Jane were more positive than the 289 00:20:19,200 --> 00:20:22,280 Speaker 1: results in a clinic setting. Again I think for the 290 00:20:22,320 --> 00:20:28,199 Speaker 1: reasons that I just mentioned. So at that point the 291 00:20:28,240 --> 00:20:35,040 Speaker 1: women started to take on doing procedures themselves, and in 292 00:20:35,080 --> 00:20:39,679 Speaker 1: the course of that, there was a larger group that 293 00:20:39,760 --> 00:20:42,719 Speaker 1: was recruited to actually be the service, which is what 294 00:20:42,760 --> 00:20:46,680 Speaker 1: we called it, what they called it Jane or the service. 295 00:20:47,520 --> 00:20:52,200 Speaker 1: And as women came in, there was a a front 296 00:20:52,520 --> 00:20:57,119 Speaker 1: or one apartment, someone's apartment that was designed in a 297 00:20:57,200 --> 00:21:02,760 Speaker 1: very cozy, homely support of way. Sometimes they were kids there, 298 00:21:02,800 --> 00:21:04,800 Speaker 1: and a number of weight of women who would be 299 00:21:04,800 --> 00:21:10,800 Speaker 1: waiting for their own procedure would gather there and in 300 00:21:10,840 --> 00:21:15,800 Speaker 1: a supportive environment, and then they would be taken to 301 00:21:16,080 --> 00:21:21,760 Speaker 1: the apartment where the procedures would be done, and then 302 00:21:21,760 --> 00:21:26,720 Speaker 1: they were supported and given care while they were recovering 303 00:21:26,760 --> 00:21:30,280 Speaker 1: from the procedure, and then would be sent off with 304 00:21:30,440 --> 00:21:35,080 Speaker 1: full information um about what to do if there are 305 00:21:35,119 --> 00:21:37,840 Speaker 1: any issues if there often are with any medical procedures, 306 00:21:38,640 --> 00:21:43,520 Speaker 1: and given health and h told numbers to call and 307 00:21:43,680 --> 00:21:48,760 Speaker 1: people could be get in touch with them afterwards to 308 00:21:48,840 --> 00:21:51,600 Speaker 1: make sure that everything worked out okay. So that was 309 00:21:51,680 --> 00:21:56,800 Speaker 1: the broad process. There's a book about Jane by Laura 310 00:21:56,920 --> 00:22:02,359 Speaker 1: Chaplin called Jane because Jane an abortion story there's also 311 00:22:02,400 --> 00:22:05,200 Speaker 1: a movie about it, and actually I'm now told there's 312 00:22:05,359 --> 00:22:09,640 Speaker 1: at least two Hollywood made movies that are being made 313 00:22:09,640 --> 00:22:13,360 Speaker 1: about Jane, as well as a new documentary, and they're 314 00:22:13,400 --> 00:22:19,159 Speaker 1: more details of it captured in the book Uh that 315 00:22:19,280 --> 00:22:22,919 Speaker 1: Laura Kaplan wrote about Jane. So, Heather, No, you're a 316 00:22:22,960 --> 00:22:26,000 Speaker 1: part of this really a robust tradition of Jewish activism. 317 00:22:26,000 --> 00:22:27,840 Speaker 1: I actually read some place that at one point you 318 00:22:27,880 --> 00:22:29,800 Speaker 1: wanted to be a rabbi, but that you heard that 319 00:22:30,040 --> 00:22:33,680 Speaker 1: women couldn't be rabbis. Do you feel like your background, 320 00:22:33,880 --> 00:22:37,240 Speaker 1: as you know, part of the robust legacy of Jewish 321 00:22:37,280 --> 00:22:40,840 Speaker 1: activism and social change work. Did that also impact your 322 00:22:40,880 --> 00:22:44,240 Speaker 1: work with Jane? It did. It was part of my 323 00:22:44,400 --> 00:22:51,840 Speaker 1: moral upbring. I believed, as it's said in the Bible, 324 00:22:52,560 --> 00:22:58,520 Speaker 1: Justice Justice Special, pursue saying justice twice because it's that important, 325 00:22:59,520 --> 00:23:06,080 Speaker 1: really leaving uh, that the stories of the prophets should 326 00:23:06,080 --> 00:23:12,320 Speaker 1: guide us in some ways, that it's the people who 327 00:23:12,320 --> 00:23:20,000 Speaker 1: should rise and not just those in wealth and power. Um. 328 00:23:20,119 --> 00:23:25,200 Speaker 1: There also was a history of struggle of the past 329 00:23:25,280 --> 00:23:28,600 Speaker 1: over story pants overs coming, and the story of people 330 00:23:29,880 --> 00:23:33,600 Speaker 1: even going forty years in the desert to us the 331 00:23:33,720 --> 00:23:41,160 Speaker 1: land of greater promise UH to to escape oppressions, and 332 00:23:41,280 --> 00:23:46,200 Speaker 1: I believe that that was a tradition that was worth embracing. 333 00:23:46,280 --> 00:23:49,359 Speaker 1: So that was part of the moral of ringing that 334 00:23:49,440 --> 00:23:53,120 Speaker 1: I had and have tried to carry that on into 335 00:23:54,000 --> 00:23:59,320 Speaker 1: the organizing work I've done, and since that time, I've 336 00:24:00,040 --> 00:24:02,040 Speaker 1: had to carry it on in so many ways. I 337 00:24:02,080 --> 00:24:06,639 Speaker 1: started a training center for organizers called Midwest Academy. People 338 00:24:07,359 --> 00:24:11,600 Speaker 1: encourage your listeners to pursue mid West Academy because it's 339 00:24:11,600 --> 00:24:16,040 Speaker 1: a it's a place to learn the skills of organizing UM. 340 00:24:16,320 --> 00:24:22,760 Speaker 1: Their website is www. Newwest Academy dot com UM. I've 341 00:24:22,800 --> 00:24:29,240 Speaker 1: also ended up running some large scale organizations for advising them. 342 00:24:29,240 --> 00:24:33,199 Speaker 1: I was strategic advisor for the immigration reform campaign, the 343 00:24:33,200 --> 00:24:37,440 Speaker 1: Alliance for Citizenship, a round the campaign for financial reform 344 00:24:37,520 --> 00:24:41,919 Speaker 1: that won the Dodd Bank film. I was the coordinator 345 00:24:41,960 --> 00:24:46,919 Speaker 1: around the Marriage Equality campaign UM. I just was the 346 00:24:47,040 --> 00:24:51,000 Speaker 1: field director and the campaign to stop these UH tax 347 00:24:51,080 --> 00:24:54,359 Speaker 1: breaks for the millionaires and billionaires. That will mean that 348 00:24:54,480 --> 00:24:59,480 Speaker 1: there will be an excuse to make cuts in social security, 349 00:24:59,560 --> 00:25:04,639 Speaker 1: Medicare and Medicaid, and education and other essential human services. 350 00:25:04,800 --> 00:25:10,120 Speaker 1: So the struggle continues, and right now people I think 351 00:25:10,440 --> 00:25:13,879 Speaker 1: especially need to learn this lesson that even when time 352 00:25:14,000 --> 00:25:18,639 Speaker 1: seemed the most difficult, we can make progress if we organize, 353 00:25:19,520 --> 00:25:23,160 Speaker 1: and if we organized, we can change the world, and 354 00:25:23,200 --> 00:25:26,080 Speaker 1: we need to change the world. I could not have 355 00:25:26,080 --> 00:25:28,480 Speaker 1: put it better myself. These fights are still fights that 356 00:25:28,520 --> 00:25:31,560 Speaker 1: need to be fought. And we can get complacent and 357 00:25:31,560 --> 00:25:34,120 Speaker 1: we can get comfortable, but as you said, we need 358 00:25:34,160 --> 00:25:37,040 Speaker 1: to be organizing. And I'm so glad that you're in 359 00:25:37,080 --> 00:25:40,720 Speaker 1: the fight doing this work with us because we need you, Heather, 360 00:25:40,880 --> 00:25:43,919 Speaker 1: and I'm so glad that we have you well, and 361 00:25:43,960 --> 00:25:47,399 Speaker 1: I'm so glad that we have you. Uh, spread the words, 362 00:25:47,520 --> 00:25:50,400 Speaker 1: spread the message. I'm so glad we have those who 363 00:25:50,400 --> 00:25:54,080 Speaker 1: are listing in. I hope they'll take They probably have 364 00:25:54,280 --> 00:25:58,399 Speaker 1: been taking action. We need to continue taking action and 365 00:25:58,600 --> 00:26:04,480 Speaker 1: unify and give people confidence that we can organize and 366 00:26:04,520 --> 00:26:07,960 Speaker 1: when we organize, even in times that seem the most difficult, 367 00:26:08,720 --> 00:26:12,080 Speaker 1: we have changed the world in the past and we 368 00:26:12,119 --> 00:26:15,480 Speaker 1: can change the world for the future. Let's take a 369 00:26:15,560 --> 00:26:26,159 Speaker 1: quick break. Well, it's been to listeners, so I know 370 00:26:26,200 --> 00:26:28,200 Speaker 1: abortion can seem like an issue that we no longer 371 00:26:28,200 --> 00:26:31,600 Speaker 1: have to fight for that we did in the seventies. Okay, Hi, 372 00:26:32,119 --> 00:26:37,640 Speaker 1: it's two Bridget and wow, how wrong I was so 373 00:26:37,920 --> 00:26:40,480 Speaker 1: right here in the original episode, I started going on 374 00:26:40,520 --> 00:26:43,080 Speaker 1: and on about how even though Roe was the law 375 00:26:43,119 --> 00:26:45,520 Speaker 1: of the land, we still needed to be vigilant because 376 00:26:45,520 --> 00:26:48,440 Speaker 1: of state based attacks on abortion. And now here we 377 00:26:48,480 --> 00:26:51,760 Speaker 1: are in two and as you know, ro versus weight 378 00:26:51,840 --> 00:26:56,440 Speaker 1: has been overturned. And even though it is truly devastating, 379 00:26:56,720 --> 00:26:59,199 Speaker 1: abortion advocates have been preparing for this moment for a 380 00:26:59,320 --> 00:27:02,680 Speaker 1: very long time. There are organized networks of abortion funds 381 00:27:02,680 --> 00:27:05,199 Speaker 1: and bail funds and providers who are ready to assist 382 00:27:05,200 --> 00:27:08,080 Speaker 1: folks looking for abortions. We're not in a place where 383 00:27:08,080 --> 00:27:11,199 Speaker 1: scrappy college kids need to invent underground collectives at a 384 00:27:11,240 --> 00:27:13,880 Speaker 1: whole cloth like Heather did with the Jane Collective back 385 00:27:13,880 --> 00:27:16,640 Speaker 1: on the seventies. There are people who care and who 386 00:27:16,680 --> 00:27:19,159 Speaker 1: want to help, who are prepared for this moment. Go 387 00:27:19,240 --> 00:27:22,439 Speaker 1: to Abortion Funds dot org and support them. And you know, 388 00:27:22,680 --> 00:27:25,520 Speaker 1: in this moment, which I know seems so dark and 389 00:27:25,600 --> 00:27:29,640 Speaker 1: so tough, remember we are the majority. There are more 390 00:27:29,680 --> 00:27:32,359 Speaker 1: of us than there are of them, and we won't 391 00:27:32,400 --> 00:27:39,160 Speaker 1: back down. If you're looking for ways to support the show, 392 00:27:39,480 --> 00:27:42,280 Speaker 1: check out our March store at Tangodi dot com flash Store, 393 00:27:43,520 --> 00:27:45,560 Speaker 1: Got a story about an interesting thing in tech, or 394 00:27:45,600 --> 00:27:47,479 Speaker 1: just want to say hi, You can reach us at 395 00:27:47,480 --> 00:27:50,240 Speaker 1: Hello at tangodi dot com. You can also find transcripts 396 00:27:50,240 --> 00:27:52,720 Speaker 1: for today's episode at tangodi dot com. There Are No 397 00:27:52,760 --> 00:27:55,400 Speaker 1: Girls on the Internet was created by me Bridgeta. It's 398 00:27:55,400 --> 00:27:58,240 Speaker 1: a production of I Heeart Radio and Unboss Creative edited 399 00:27:58,240 --> 00:28:01,520 Speaker 1: by Joey pat John Van Strictland as our executive producer. 400 00:28:01,920 --> 00:28:05,080 Speaker 1: Terry Harrison is our producer and sound engineer. Michael Amatta 401 00:28:05,160 --> 00:28:08,159 Speaker 1: was our contributing producer. I'm your host, bridget Todd. If 402 00:28:08,160 --> 00:28:09,879 Speaker 1: you want to help us grow, rate and review us 403 00:28:09,920 --> 00:28:13,400 Speaker 1: on Apple Podcasts. For more podcast from iHeart Radio, check 404 00:28:13,400 --> 00:28:15,600 Speaker 1: out the iHeart Radio app, Apple podcast, or wherever you 405 00:28:15,640 --> 00:28:16,520 Speaker 1: get your podcasts.