A Message from Bishop Frederick Henry
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On Bill C-384
My Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ,
On
May 13, 2009 MP Francine Lalonde, Bloc Quebecois, introduced her
private member’s Bill C-384, An Act to amend the Criminal Code (right
to die with dignity), to legalize Euthanasia and Physician Assisted
Suicide in Canada.
The issue is one of pressing interest and concern but also widespread confusion.
A
major cause of the confusion is what George Orwell in his essay,
“Politics and the English Language,” calls the language of “euphemisms,
question-begging and sheer cloudy vagueness.” Some of the language
being used in the euthanasia debate appears “designed to makes lies
sound truthful and murder acceptable, and give an appearance of
solidity to pure wind.”
The rhetoric of “choice,”
“aid-in-dying,” “compassion,” “a new medical treatment,”
“self-determination,” “autonomy,” and “death with dignity” tend to
cover up the reality that euthanasia is a deliberate act undertaken by
one individual with the intention and result of ending the life of
another to relieve that person’s suffering. Assisted suicide is the act
of killing oneself with the assistance of another who provides the
knowledge, means or both.
This proposed legislation
would reverse the reigning medical ethic which for more than two
millennia has insisted that doctors must heal and never kill.
Legalizing physician assisted-suicide would irreparably damage the
doctor-patient relationship. The patient’s trust in the doctor’s
whole-hearted devotion to the patient’s best interests will be hard to
sustain once doctors are licensed to kill. Furthermore, such
legislation would put undue stress on the conscience of the physician
pressured by patients and others to take part in killing.
The
unmistakable issue is the intentional killing of a human being. It has
nothing to do with natural death or dignity, and everything to do with
killing. We are not discussing letting someone die.
Euthanasia
is NOT respecting a patient’s refusal of treatment at anytime in the
course of treatment. Medical tradition and practice clearly distinguish
between refusal of medical intervention and intentionally causing death
by euthanasia.
Euthanasia is NOT discontinuing
treatment when it serves no therapeutic purpose or the patient requests
treatment to cease; NOR is it abstaining from medically futile
treatment.
All treatments that impose undue burdens on
the patient without overriding benefits or that simply provide no
benefits may justifiably be withheld or withdrawn. In making such
decisions, the judgment is about the worth of treatment, not about the
worth of lives.
The provision of adequate medicines to
control pain is NOT euthanasia. The administration of high doses of
pain-killers and sedatives to terminally ill patients may lead to a
shortening of their lives. It is, however, morally acceptable to
administer such drugs in doses which are linked to their painkilling or
sedative effects, and not to the termination of life. It is not correct
to call this “euthanasia” because there is no intention to shorten the
patient’s life.
Those favouring assisted-suicide have
not given adequate attention to palliative care. The goal of palliative
care is to give comfort and thereby enable the dying to live while
dying. Letting life ebb away can in no way be equated with active
euthanasia. Allowing to die is a world removed from giving a lethal
injection.
Palliative care also aims at lessening or
managing the suffering of terminal patients. Often they feel helpless,
lonely, in the way, and a burden to others. With empathy, comfort care,
and affirmation, palliative care-givers accompany patients in
their suffering and by their kindness and compassion help the patient
maintain a sense of worth and a feeling of belonging, and move from
depression to hope.
The legislation of aid-in-dying
would pose a threat to the elderly, the infirm, handicapped newborns,
and to all members of society who are unable to look after their own
best interests. This kind of legislation says to them: “you’re not
important; you’re not needed; in fact, you are a burden to others.”
Canadian
citizens should be assured that their dignity at every stage of life is
recognized by government as important. They must be reassured by
government that their needs will be met humanely. They must be shown
true compassion in the care they receive from society, not through
death-dealing, but by being looked after in a life-giving way.
As
Canadians, we all have a duty to speak up for the rights and dignity of
every citizen. I urge you to understand the issues, get involved and
stand up for life!
Wishing you all the best, I remain,
Sincerely yours in Christ,
August 05, 2009
✠ F. B. Henry
Bishop of Calgary
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