名人轶事30:Margaret Sanger
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    By Doreen Baingana

    Broadcast: December 19, 2004

    (THEME)

    VOICE ONE:

    I’m Shirley Griffith.

    VOICE TWO:

    And I’m Sarah Long with the VOA Special English Program, People in America.

    Today, we tell about one of the leaders of the birth control movement,

    Margaret Sanger.

    (THEME)

    VOICE ONE:

    Many women today have the freedom to decide when they will have children, if

    they want them. Until about fifty years ago, women spent most of their adult

    lives having children, year after year. This changed because of efforts by

    activists like Margaret Sanger. She believed that a safe and sure method of

    preventing pregnancy was a necessary condition for women’s freedom. She also

    believed birth control was necessary for human progress.

    VOICE TWO:

    The woman who changed other women’s lives was born in Eighteen-Eighty-Three

    in the eastern state of New York. Her parents were Michael and Anne Higgins.

    Margaret wrote several books about her life. She wrote that her father taught

    her to question everything. She said he taught her to be an independent

    thinker.

    Margaret said that watching her mother suffer from having too many children

    made her feel strongly about birth control. Her mother died at forty-eight

    years of age after eighteen pregnancies. She was always tired and sick.

    Margaret had to care for her mother and her ten surviving brothers and

    sisters. This experience led her to become a nurse.

    Margaret Higgins worked in the poor areas of New York City. Most people there

    had recently arrived in the United States from Europe. Margaret saw the

    suffering of hundreds of women who tried to end their pregnancies in illegal

    and harmful ways. She realized that this was not just a health problem. These

    women suffered because of their low position in society.

    Margaret saw that not having control over one’s body led to problems that

    were passed on from mother to daughter and through the family for years. She

    said she became tired of cures that did not solve the real problem. Instead,

    she wanted to change the whole life of a mother.

    (MUSIC)

    VOICE ONE:

    In Nineteen-Oh-Two, Margaret married William Sanger. They had three children.

    Margaret compared her own middle-class life to that of the poor people she

    worked among. This increased her desire to deal with economic and social

    issues. At this time, Margaret Sanger became involved in the liberal

    political culture of an area of New York City known as Greenwich Village.

    Sanger became a labor union organizer. She learned methods of protest and

    propaganda, which she used in her birth control activism.

    Sanger traveled to Paris, France, in Nineteen-Thirteen, to research European

    methods of birth control. She also met with members of Socialist political

    groups who influenced her birth control policies. She returned to the United

    States prepared to change women’s lives.

    VOICE TWO:

    At first, Margaret Sanger sought the support of leaders of the women’s

    movement, members of the Socialist party, and the medical profession. But,

    she wrote that they told her to wait until women were permitted to vote. She

    decided to continue working alone.

    One of Margaret Sanger’s first important political acts was to publish a

    monthly newspaper called The Woman Rebel. She designed it. She wrote for it.

    And she paid for it. The newspaper called for women to reject the traditional

    woman’s position. The first copy was published in March, Nineteen-Fourteen.

    The Woman Rebel was an angry paper that discussed disputed and sometimes

    illegal subjects. These included labor problems, marriage, the sex business,

    and revolution.

    Sanger had an immediate goal. She wanted to change laws that prevented birth

    control education and sending birth control devices through the mail.

    VOICE ONE:

    The Woman Rebel became well-known in New York and elsewhere. Laws at that

    time banned the mailing of materials considered morally bad. This included

    any form of birth control information. The law was known as the Comstock Act.

    Officials ordered Sanger to stop sending out her newspaper.

    Sanger instead wrote another birth control document called Family Limitation.

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