Not afraid to be a minority of one – Fairfid Caudle

I am writing to tell you about the June 8 Catholic rally in New York City. I found out where it was being held from the email that FFRF sent, which included a banner to print out.

It was much too large to print on my home printer at home, so I called my local Staples early the next morning to find out if they could print it from an email forwarded to them. The result was a beautiful 1×3-foot laminated banner on heavy paper for a very reasonable cost, saying ā€œQuit the Church ā€” Put Womenā€™s Rights Over Bishopsā€™ Wrongs.ā€

The rally was held in front of Federal Hall at 26 Wall St. in Manhattan. A speaker told attendees the site was selected because it was where James Madison introduced the Bill of Rights in the First Congress. The First Amendmentā€™s Establishment Clause forbids government from establishing religion in any way.

This was the crux of the Catholicsā€™ argument, that their so-called ā€œreligious freedomā€ was trampled on by the Obama administrationā€™s health care proposal, later altered in a compromise, to ensure that all women had access to reproductive health care services, particularly contraception, which is contrary to the Catholic point of view.

I was interviewed and photographed by a journalist from the Brooklyn Diocese. He said he was seeking ā€œopposing voicesā€ to balance coverage of the event. I gave permission to use this material.

I canā€™t tell you how many people came up to me and photographed the banner and said things such as that they would pray for me, etc. I got into discussions with several people and tried to articulate why I believed that what the Catholic Church called ā€œreligious freedomā€ was in reality an attempt to prevent any woman, including those who worked for a Catholic employer, from having access to contraceptives through their health insurance.

I argued in vain that no one was required to use contraception even if available in their health care program. Over and over people said that ā€œcontraception is easy to get and cheap, about $9 a month, and so women can get it if they want it. The Catholic Church just doesnā€™t want to pay for it.ā€

I was the only opposing voice there, as far as I could tell. There seemed to be 100 to 200 demonstrators, many with signs being handed out opposing ā€œObamaCareā€ and abortion and anything else that the Catholic Church opposes in this regard. There were prayers and hymns. Speakers included, among others, a Catholic female physician, a lawyer and Martin Luther King Jr.ā€™s granddaughter (or so I was told).

The rallyā€™s organization and the fervor of the onlookers was very sobering and made clear the enormous battle being waged as well as the reality of what we are up against.

I learned that itā€™s very difficult to be a minority of one in the face of such numbers. At least I still have my beautiful banner for another day!

Fairfid Caudle is a Lifetime Member from New York.

Freedom From Religion Foundation