Hindus find Ireland report on miscarrying Hindu woman’s death “deficient”

This article was last updated on April 16, 2022

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Hindus have found the recent Ireland Health Service Executive final draft report about death of miscarrying Hindu women as “deficient”.

Reacting to the reports about this draft report, distinguished Hindu statesman Rajan Zed, in a statement in Nevada (USA) today, said that the report did not seem to answer the primary question—why the 31-year old dentist Savita Halappanavar was denied life-saving abortion.

Terming her death unnecessary and preventable, Zed, who is President of Universal Society of Hinduism, stated that Ireland needed to do serious soul searching. It was 2013 and in view of its increasingly diverse, pluralistic and multicultural society, Ireland needed to relook at some of its outdated laws dating back to 1861 and introduce reform.

Rajan Zed noted that Hindu community worldwide was highly disturbed over Halappanavar’s death in University Hospital Galway (Ireland). Ireland should ensure the world that no one would die in similar circumstances in the future. How can one see this tragedy as “pro-life”? Zed asked.

Halappanavar appeared to have been forced to abide by a religious doctrine of the majority to which she did not belong, Zed argued.

Rajan Zed further said that human rights, women’s rights and rights of religious minorities seemed to have been sacrificed for electoral greed in Ireland. Leaders of this country of James Joyce, Robert Boyle, William Butler Yeats, Saint Patrick, U2, Undertones, shamrocks, 40 shades of green, Emerald Isle, should exhibit strong political will and European Union should take tough line on Ireland on this issue.

Hindus also wanted public apology from Ireland President Michael Daniel Higgins and Prime Minister Enda Kenny for Halappanavar’s reportedly preventable death, Zed said.

Although no amount of money could possibly match this tragedy and human loss, but Halappanavar’s family should be adequately compensated, Rajan Zed added.

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1 Comment

  1. It is clear from the report that Savita died due to ‘overemphasis’ on the unviable foetus and ‘under-emphasis’ on her deteriorating health. Here is a poem I wrote on on Savita Halappanavar.

    THE EDICT OF LIFE
    I was a foetus: the future crown
    of womanood, growing
    in the warmth of your womb,
    cradled in a web of dreams:
    for you the caring motherhood,
    for me an ever receding skyline.

    Suddenly something happened;
    you started miscarrying;
    frantically your fingers moved
    over the belly to feel
    if my heart was beating.
    A faint, assuring movement
    throbbed beneath your palm.
    Then it grew fainter and fainter,
    ceasing to pulsate any longer.

    And you asked for a termination.
    But they denied you the choice:
    an insentient foetus
    still a precious gift of God,
    forbcomment_IDden for expulsion.

    Agony prolonged; then, at last,
    your life, a divine gift too,
    was aborted instead;
    a painful, senseless death
    shattered dreams on the altar of edict.

    A.K. DAS, India

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