George Tiller Refused To Quit: "Women Need Me"

digg Share this on Facebook Huffpost - George Tiller Refused To Quit: "Women Need Me" stumble reddit del.ico.us RSS

SHARON COHEN | June 2, 2009 09:49 AM EST | AP

Compare other versions »
I Like ItI Don’t Like It
FILE - This Jan. 19, 2002 file photo shows Dr. George Tiller speaking to a small group during a rally at Tiller's clinic in Wichita, Kan. (AP Photo/Larry Smith, File)

To some he was an unflinching hero, to others a remorseless villain. As a late-term abortion doctor, George Tiller knew he had chosen a dangerous career, one that made him a lightning rod. His clinic was a fortress, his days marred by threats, but he refused to give up what he saw as his life's mission.

"He never wavered," says Susie Gilligan, who knew Tiller as part of her work in the Feminist Majority Foundation. "He never backed away. He had incredible strength. When you spoke to him, he was a soft-spoken man, a very gentle man. He said, 'This is what I have to do. Women need me. I know they need me.'"

Tiller, 67, whose Wichita, Kan., clinic had been the target of anti-abortion protests for more than two decades, was fatally shot Sunday while serving as an usher at his church. The suspect, identified by police as Scott Roeder, was taken into custody three hours later on suspicion of murder.

As one of a few doctors across the nation to perform third-trimester abortions, Tiller had survived an earlier shooting, his clinic was bombed, his home picketed. He hired a Brink's armored truck to take him to work for several weeks, he had federal marshals protecting him for 30 months. He built a new surgical center without windows and he was known to wear a bulletproof vest, sometimes even to church.

Through it all, he stood defiant.

When a pipe bomb heavily damaged his clinic in the mid 1980s, he hung a sign outside the rubble saying: "Hell, No. We Won't Go!" He offered a $10,000 award _ which was never collected.

When thousands of protesters gathered at the Women's Health Care Services clinic in 1991 for the 45-day "Summer of Mercy" demonstration staged by Operation Rescue, he was again unbowed.

"I am a willing participant in this conflict," he said at the time. "I choose to be here because I feel that it is the moral, it is the ethical thing to do."

Story continues below
advertisement

He told The Wichita Eagle newspaper in 1991 that prayer and meditation helped him through hard times. "If I'm OK on the inside," he said, "what people say on the outside does not make much difference."

When a woman passing out anti-abortion literature shot him in both arms outside the clinic two years later, he briefly pursued her by car, recalls Peggy Bowman, his former spokeswoman. "He didn't even know he was shot and all of a sudden he saw this blood (and figured), 'I probably shouldn't spend my time chasing this woman,'" she says.

Tiller suffered minor wounds _ and was back at the clinic the next day. (That's when he hired the armored truck.)

This spring, Tiller was acquitted of misdemeanor charges of violating Kansas restrictions on late-term abortions. Shortly after, the state's medical board announced it was investigating allegations against him that were nearly identical to those a jury had rejected.

Tiller's outspokenness rankled his critics, who decried as a publicity stunt his offer several years ago to provide free abortions on the anniversary of the Roe vs. Wade Supreme Court decision that legalized abortion. He said at the time at least 32 low-income women signed up for the free first-trimester abortions.

Abortion opponents also claimed Tiller's large financial involvement in Kansas politics thwarted prosecutions against him. They routinely blamed Tiller's "corrupt influences in the government" whenever legislation strengthening state abortion laws failed to pass the Legislature or was vetoed by the governor.

While anti-abortion activists have condemned Tiller's death, Randall Terry, founder of Operation Rescue _ who also said the gunman was wrong _ told the National Press Club on Monday the doctor was "a mass murderer and, horrifically, he reaped what he sowed."

Tiller, a former Navy flight surgeon, hadn't planned to be an abortion doctor. He hoped to become a dermatologist.

But when his father, also a doctor, died in a plane crash (his mother, sister and brother-in-law also were killed), he took over the family practice. He soon learned the elder Tiller had performed abortions.

"In reading through some of his records, he realized his father had done abortions when they were illegal," says Bowman, his former spokeswoman. "At first, he was really shocked. Then in going through those charts, he totally began to understand the importance of this service."

Friends and colleagues say Tiller, a father of four and grandfather of 10, was a strong-willed, unassuming man who was quick with a hug or a joke. He decorated his office with family photos. He cherished rituals; he raised American flags in his clinic parking lot after the 1991 protests were over and later gave them to volunteers.

"He was never riled, he was always calm and cool," says Eleanor Smeal, president of the Feminist Majority Foundation. "He was a very serious man, but a very good-natured one."

In a 2008 speech to a young women's leadership conference sponsored by the foundation, he said he was on a hit list in 1994, leading to federal protection. His wife was stalked, he said, and the names of his vendors were made public on the Internet.

"But the good news," he said, "is we still live in the United States of America" and Roe vs. Wade allows women the opportunity to terminate pregnancies.

Dr. Susan Robinson, a California obstetrician-gynecologist who calls Tiller her mentor, recalls one day when she asked him: "How can you stand it being in a pressure cooker?' He said, 'If it it's none of my business, I don't get involved. If it doesn't matter, I don't get involved. If there's nothing I can do about it, I don't get involved.' "

But it was clear his work had taken a toll. Willow Eby, who worked as a volunteer escort at the clinic, remembers a conference she attended last year for abortion providers where he talked about his work.

"He explained that this would take your youth, it would take your energy, it would wear you down," she recalls. "But he said he would not let down the women who needed him badly."

Tiller once said his "gifts of understanding" helped him bring a service to women that aided them in fulfilling their dreams of a happy, healthy family. It was important, he said, that women have a choice when dealing with technology that can diagnose severe fetal abnormalities before a baby is born.

"Prenatal testing without prenatal choices is medical fraud," he declared.

Colleagues said Tiller's office walls were lined with letters from patients expressing their thanks.

One woman who turned to him was Miriam Kleiman, of northern Virginia. Nine years ago, a routine sonogram revealed her 29-week-old fetus had major brain abnormalities that prevented the baby's heart and lungs from functioning properly.

Doctors told her the baby would die in utero or soon after birth. Kleiman's doctors told her a third trimester abortion was not possible.

Kleiman says she could not bear a two-month death watch. "There was a baby dying inside of me, and it wasn't if, but when," she says.

After desperate pleas, she says, a doctor scribbled Tiller's name on a scrap of paper. She and her husband flew to Wichita and drove through a gauntlet of protesters to the fortress-like clinic.

She remembers Tiller and his staff as kind and compassionate. She had the abortion and brought home her baby to be buried.

Kleiman, who now has two sons, says she cried when she heard of Tiller's death while watching her son's soccer game.

"I fear," she says, "that other people might not have this option in the future _ to have a medical option that was safe, that was legal and allowed us to say goodbye with dignity."

___

Associated Press writers Roxana Hegeman in Wichita and Sam Hananel in Washington, D.C., contributed to this report and Rhonda Shafner in New York provided research.

To some he was an unflinching hero, to others a remorseless villain. As a late-term abortion doctor, George Tiller knew he had chosen a dangerous career, one that made him a lightning rod. His clinic ...
To some he was an unflinching hero, to others a remorseless villain. As a late-term abortion doctor, George Tiller knew he had chosen a dangerous career, one that made him a lightning rod. His clinic ...
Filed by Rachel Weiner
 
Comments
187
Pending Comments
0
iPhone App Promo

Want to reply to a comment? Hint: Click "Reply" at the bottom of the comment; after being approved your comment will appear directly underneath the comment you replied to

View Comments:
Page: 1 2 3 4 Next › Last » (4 pages total)
photo

Today, I donated money to Planned Parenthood. For many years, they were my health care provider because I was uninsured. I also lived in a neighborhood in San Diego with an abortions clinic. Those so called right to lifers made life in that neighborhood hell. I despise them. Give money so that they can hire private security and continue their work. We cannot allow the terrorist to win.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:15 AM on 06/03/2009
- Weirdwriter I'm a Fan of Weirdwriter 332 fans permalink
photo

How ironic that Dr.Tiller was more of a Christian than his murderer. How fortunate that he inspired others to carry on his necessary calling.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:00 AM on 06/03/2009
- RJII I'm a Fan of RJII 76 fans permalink
photo

He was a brave one. A man who died protecting the rights and care of women. Every day, he must have known his possible end. My condolences to his family and love ones..

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:03 PM on 06/02/2009
- Roxanna I'm a Fan of Roxanna 31 fans permalink

What a Hero George Tillman was for standing up for the rights of women in order for them to make personal decision about their own body and their own life.

What I can not understand, the "anti abortionist" that are so for the "sanctity if life" when it comes to the "unborn" but have no regard to the sanctity if life when it comes from other primates on this planet or for human beings who are all ready alive.... What hypocrites. Killing in the name of "Mindless" Religion.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:30 PM on 06/02/2009
- Idablu I'm a Fan of Idablu 3 fans permalink
photo

Please!
No man or gov will ever tell me what to do with my body.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:28 PM on 06/02/2009
- Oblique I'm a Fan of Oblique 3 fans permalink

Charles Manson never killed anyone, he was charged with conspiracy. He was found guilty of the murders through the joint responsibility rule. The police or federal marshals should round up the individuals that helped Roeder commit murder.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:22 PM on 06/02/2009
- ThomasMc I'm a Fan of ThomasMc 10 fans permalink

Terrorism: It's the Born Again Christian way.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:03 PM on 06/02/2009
- whybaby I'm a Fan of whybaby 4 fans permalink

May God bless Dr. George Tiller, a committed, courageous hero, protector, and champion of women and their rights and freedoms. My heart goes out to his family, colleagues, and community for their trauma and loss. And may all those in the Wichita clinic, and in every women's clinic in America who lift this burden and follow in Dr. Tiller's wake know how much we need and appreciate their service and their courage.

Why do the worst of the worst always seem to carry one of two weapons: their flag or their bible? A terrorist and murderer who hides behind the twisted and unrecognizable mien of their so-called godliness is still a terrorist and a murderer.

The administration must do much more to protect vulnerable doctors and their patients from the fundamentalist domestic morality terrorists, so long in our midst. They are ubiquitous - in blogs, on talk radio, writing columns, on the faux news, in the pulpit, in elective office, and in the courts.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:10 PM on 06/02/2009
photo

Nice comments, thank you. Al though I disagree with The Administration (implying Government) involvement. I have always felt that the abortion issue is between the woman, her immediate family and her creator, and nobody else, period! Least of all the government. The woman is always left with the obligation or burden, however you care to view it, but that is "her choice".

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:02 PM on 06/02/2009
- ailbhe I'm a Fan of ailbhe 11 fans permalink

RIP hero.

He died having saved many women by providing them with legal medical treatment. The antichoicers want to sacrifice all women to their ideology. They are dangerous, don't pussyfoot around them, stop them before it is too late.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:04 PM on 06/02/2009
- SENCvoter I'm a Fan of SENCvoter 6 fans permalink
photo

That is the irony. Protect the unborn, but should they be born with such severe disabilities that they require 24/7 care before they die, then these extremists will cry foul because taxpayers' money is being wasted on these children.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:40 PM on 06/02/2009
- Fuji I'm a Fan of Fuji 11 fans permalink

How about the people killed at the army recruiting station? Heroes?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:38 PM on 06/02/2009

As late as the year 1900, half of all pregnancies ended in the death of either the baby, the mother, or both. The right tends to forget what is and what isn't and only focus on the reality that they wish to believe. Maybe humans need to go back to the good old days to recapture a true sense of reality.

The end of the human race will be that it will eventually die of civilization. ~Ralph Waldo Emerson

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:28 PM on 06/02/2009

partypartyparty - what kind of high-mindedness leads you to the conclusion that Tiller was persecuted for pleasure by the city of Wichita or the state of Kansas? (And don't tell me that Sebelius was the lone exception - she ducked any association w/him once her political future dictated it. I'll retract that statement if she shows up at his memorial service). Tiller had as much local support as vilification, just as if he had operated in ultra-Catholic Boston or ultra-conservative San Diego. In the early 90's, it was an influx of waves of "activists" from across the country who perpetrated that Summer Siege. The first attempted assassin was a woman from Oregon. The man was targeted because he performed a rare procedure, not because he was situated in Kansas and Kansans are brutes.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:11 PM on 06/02/2009
photo

How about you read this, and then get back to me on the subject?

http://www.democracynow.org/2009/6/1/dr_george_tiller_1941_2009_murdered

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:53 PM on 06/02/2009
photo

And by the way: I said the state of Kansas and the city of Wichita, not the citizens of Kansas or Wichita. There's a difference.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:05 PM on 06/02/2009
photo

p.p.s. I did not post "...for pleasure by the city of Wichita, etc." I posted "....at the pleasure of...", which is a legal term, originally referring to the length of incarceration of prisoners. I would say that the State of Kansas and the City of Wichita allowed Dr. Tiller and his clinic to be a virtual prisoner of the anti-choice movement.

Dr. Tillis was targeted not because he specialized in a rare procedure, but because he was a rare individual in the United States today: a doctor who, despite a for-profit health care system and the hysteria of fundamentalists, insists on practicing family medicine, including obstetrics and gynecology, as it should be practiced, according to law and to medical ethics, and not as how people who think they should have control over a stranger's medical care want it to be practiced.

If Dr. Tiller had inherited a practice somewhere else, I couldn't say how many of his and his patients' legal rights would have been violated. I can only talk about the violations that occurred in Wichita. If the other two doctors left in this country who have the moral courage to perform third-trimester abortions are murdered, I will certainly read about their histories and make my own selfish, self-centered judgements about their protection under the law where they lived.

But I would rather self-centeredly judge the law than judge any human being, wouldn't you?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:54 PM on 06/02/2009
- Cheesemelt I'm a Fan of Cheesemelt 17 fans permalink
photo

I would nominate him posthumously for the highest civilians service award. People like the good doctor are rara avis and what he went through to help those in need is truly meritorious.

A real hero, I mourn his passing but also celebrate his work ethic, passion and unrelenting commitment.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:54 PM on 06/02/2009
photo

Truly: Dr. Tiller and everyone who works at that clinic should be awarded the Medal of Freedom.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:54 PM on 06/02/2009
- jmpurser I'm a Fan of jmpurser 150 fans permalink

Agreed. We just lost a very valuable citizen.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:38 PM on 06/02/2009

What bothers me about so many of these so-called "pro-life" people is that they're also pro-death penalty, pro-preemptive war, and opposed to any form of social safety net for those who have been born. I don't undertand why they attach such importance to the life of a fetus when it seems that, for all they care, all other forms of human life are expendable.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:46 PM on 06/02/2009
photo

Great comment! I agree completely.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:08 PM on 06/02/2009
Page: 1 2 3 4 Next › Last » (4 pages total)
Comments are closed for this entry

 You must be logged in to comment. Log in  or connect with 

Connect