Pro-abortion
group targets crisis pregnancy centres
NARAL
fishes for dissatisfied clients
By
Kevin Heinrichs
ChristianWeek staff

COURTESY OF
J†RGEN SEVERLOH
JŸrgen
Severloh of the Winnipeg Crisis Pregnancy Centre. |
A pro-abortion
group is beating the bushes to find disgruntled
clients of crisis pregnancy centres in order to
discredit the centres. The U.S.-based National
Abortion and Reproductive Rights Action League is
distributing a survey form in the U.S. and Canada
that asks women who have used the services of a
crisis pregnancy centre to describe their
experience. The
introduction to the survey says the centres
"lure women in" by offering free
pregnancy tests and reproductive health services,
but do not provide abortion referrals.
The surveys will be collected
"in order to expose the true nature and
tactics of deceptive crisis pregnancy
centres."
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JŸrgen Severloh, director of a CPC in
Winnipeg, questions the intent of the survey. "Some
of their motives may be genuinely good...women getting
good care. But Im not sure the intentions are
always so good."
Severloh says that while the CPC does
not provide referrals for abortion, the client is told
that up front. However, the clinic does provide
information on abortion, as well as adoption and
parenthood. "You build trust with a client by
providing accurate information."
Severloh refers to a similar survey
launched by a local pro-choice group a few years ago.
When he found out about it, he wrote all the pro-choice
centres, inviting them to tour his Crisis Pregnancy
Centre to ask any questions and view any resource
materials he provides. Only three made appointments; none
showed up.
Severloh is forwarding a newsletter
from a pro-life website in the U.S. that encourages CPC
clients to fill out the survey, confident that CPC
clients will present a more positive impression than
NARAL is expecting.
The Winnipeg CPC does exit interviews
with all clients who have used its services. "In the
13 years Ive been around, only a handful of people
have ever complained." He says virtually all of the
clients have said they appreciated the information and
felt loved and accepted by the staff. "We keep those
exit interviews just for times like this."
Care paramount
Bern Currie is director of Christian
Association of Pregnancy Support Services, a network of
50 Christian crisis pregnancy centres, maternity homes
and adoption agencies across Canada. He is not surprised
by NARALs attempt to discredit the centres. Though
he says clients should feel free to respond to the
survey, he is not advising member centres to solicit
their clients to fill out the survey.
"We need to decide whether
were in this to fight an abortion war or to help
our clients," says Currie, emphasizing that caring
for pregnant women, not fighting pro-choice advocates,
should be the focus. "Our directors have enough to
do."
Besides, says Currie, even without a
concerted effort to rally positive feedback, NARAL will
be hard pressed to find clients who came away
dissastisfied from crisis pregnancy centres.
"We have strict guidelines,
standards and codes of ethics in our centres and they
treat their clients accordingly," he says. "I
expect our clients would have very little to say of a
negative nature."
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