Religion and Democracy in Argentina Religious Opposition to the Legalization of Abortion
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
3. Results and Discussion
3.1. Democracy-Conforming Arguments against the Legalization of Abortion
So, when the debate was raised and started to develop, we as Christians stood up in defence of these concepts: the concept of the life in the womb that you cannot kill or interfere with, and that a woman has no right to do that, either. That is, because it is a new life, so when these two cells come together and start to form a new being that is genotypically different from his or her parents, we understand, on the basis of this definition, that we cannot accept this as a right in our society or our country because it is not, because the woman’s right is being prioritized over the fetus’s and the embryo’s right (…) I have been told: ‘But you are a Christian, you have neither voice nor authority to defend life’. So I say, no, that’s not right: on the one hand, what I say comes from what I feel and from the word of God, and on the other, it comes from science, I cannot ignore what science says, you cannot ignore that this is an unborn human being, so if you want to make one decision or other, that’s all right and that’s respectable, but we understand, based on this concept, that we cannot allow that.(Director of the bioethics department of the Christian Alliance of Evangelical Churches of the Argentine Republic—ACIERA, by its Spanish acronym; personal interview, 24 February 2022)
We even showed surveys about this issue carried out in shanty towns, and they couldn’t care less, so I don’t think there was a debate, it was rather something that had to be imposed, which involves reducing the Argentine population and well, many other criteria that lead to the same. One is abortion, another one is fostering childless couples, in many different ways and, well, thousands of other forms. I think this is an imposition, evidently from abroad. Rockefeller had already started to say this in his time. This was upheld, during all this time, with the support of the loan and credit organizations, of the IMF, and it’s no coincidence, it’s no coincidence that [the then president] Macri, in 2018, at the time of the IMF visit, should raise the issue of abortion; it’s no coincidence that Alberto Fernández, now that he has to negotiate with the IMF, should also raise this issue, so I think it is Argentine intellectuals that are the most contradictory, rather than the poorest people.(Father Pepe Di Paola, personal interview, 25 March 2022)
So we think that a democratic mistake was made in this case. Because, you see, the fact that you represent the people does not mean that you can vote according to your own ideology, your own way of thinking; we expected them to cast their vote according to the majority’s way of thinking, in a country where the Constitution is in favour of both lives. This is our interpretation of how democracy went astray.(Executive Director of ACIERA, personal interview, 24 February 2002)
I think that, deep down, they have links with an international proposal. Argentina is not Buenos Aires (…) they think differently from the rest of the country, so in a shanty town you will find that practically 100% of people were against abortion. Some of them even told me that they had been to the demonstrations because they had been taken to them by organizations, and they would go there with a light-blue headscarf and were made to take it off because, you see, they went to the square [Plaza de Mayo], I didn’t go there, but they went to the square and stood on one side. These things were the consequence of Argentine politics, I don’t think this just happened innocently.(Father Pepe Di Paola, personal interview, 25 March 2022)
3.2. Democracy-Conforming Actions
4. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
1 | Particularly important were the interventions of conservative religious groups and feminist activists in the consultative commissions that preceded the parliamentary debates in both the House of Representatives and the Senate. |
2 | Translator’s note: The keywords were abortion, voluntary termination of pregnancy (IVE), green headscarves, and light-blue headscarves; the hashtags indicated ‘let’s save both lives’, ‘the light-blue majority’, ‘Argentina is pro-life’, ‘save the 2 of them’, ‘abortion is not health’, ‘abortion is health’, ‘girls not mothers’, ‘joining voices’, ‘IVE’, ‘abortion historic session’, and ‘all lives are valuable’. |
3 | The F.A.L. ruling was a decision by the Argentine Supreme Court that settled the dispute about the interpretation of Article 88 of the Argentine Criminal Code: Before abortion was legalized in 2020, some actors of the judiciary and civil society could claim that abortion was not subjected to punishment if the person had become pregnant as a consequence of rape, whereas their opponents upheld a restrictive reading of this article, according to which abortion was not punishable by law only if rape had been committed against a ‘feeble-minded or insane’ person. The Court finally ruled in favor of the first group after addressing a controversial case in the province of Chubut, where a young person had become pregnant after being raped by their stepfather. |
4 | In Argentina, religious organizations often used the social work that they conduct in the most marginalized areas of society, supplementing public policies as a kind of ‘spare tire’, to gain legitimacy before the state and to claim recognition as public representatives of popular sectors (Carbonelli 2015). |
5 | In Argentina, shaming originated in a different context, as it had been associated with the fight for justice by the organization Hijos e Hijas por la Identidad y la Justicia contra el Olvido y el Silencio (HIJOS) (Sons and Daughters for Identity and Justice against Forgetting and Silence) during the 1990s, as a form of social condemnation of the perpetrators of repression during the last civic–military dictatorship who had not been criminally prosecuted (Cueto Rúa 2010). In this regard, interestingly, a strategy used by a sector that fought for human rights to make injustice visible was given a new meaning by both feminist groups and conservative sectors. Whereas this practice was adopted by more conservative sectors for the first time, the extent of its use by feminist groups deserved reflection, especially if conceived of as a strategy that could be complementary to, but never fully replace, the demand for the proper functioning of institutional channels (Di Corletto 2019). |
6 | An amparo action is a legal measure that can be admitted against any action or omission by a public authority that, in a manifestly arbitrary or illegal manner, causes actual or imminent damage, restriction, or alteration of, or threat to, rights or guarantees that are explicitly or implicitly recognized by the National Constitution, except individual liberty, which is protected by habeas corpus (Law N° 16.986/1966). |
7 | In Argentina, before general elections, open, simultaneous, and mandatory primary elections (PASO, by their acronym in Spanish) are held. They establish the minimum number of votes required for a candidate to run for office in the general election while also making it possible to settle internal party competitions with the participation of the citizens as a whole. Voting is compulsory for all Argentine citizens over the age of 18 and optional for those over the age of 16. |
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Carbonelli, M.; García Bossio, M.P. Religion and Democracy in Argentina Religious Opposition to the Legalization of Abortion. Religions 2023, 14, 563. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14050563
Carbonelli M, García Bossio MP. Religion and Democracy in Argentina Religious Opposition to the Legalization of Abortion. Religions. 2023; 14(5):563. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14050563
Chicago/Turabian StyleCarbonelli, Marcos, and Maria Pilar García Bossio. 2023. "Religion and Democracy in Argentina Religious Opposition to the Legalization of Abortion" Religions 14, no. 5: 563. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14050563
APA StyleCarbonelli, M., & García Bossio, M. P. (2023). Religion and Democracy in Argentina Religious Opposition to the Legalization of Abortion. Religions, 14(5), 563. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel14050563