Misplaced Pages

Gianna Jessen: Difference between revisions

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Browse history interactively← Previous editNext edit →Content deleted Content addedVisualWikitext
Revision as of 22:15, 23 March 2006 editJJay (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users8,366 edits rv addition of "facts"- please add serious material with references- thanks← Previous edit Revision as of 15:34, 31 March 2006 edit undoPissant (talk | contribs)3,782 edits remove null tagNext edit →
Line 1: Line 1:
] ]

'''Gianna Jessen''' (born ], ] in ]) is a ] advocate and symbol. '''Gianna Jessen''' (born ], ] in ]) is a ] advocate and symbol.



Revision as of 15:34, 31 March 2006

File:GiannaJessen.jpg
Gianna Jessen

Gianna Jessen (born April 6, 1977 in Los Angeles, California) is a pro-life advocate and symbol.

Jessen was born over a month premature after a failed saline abortion. The doctor who had carried out the abortion was not present at the moment that Gianna was born alive, and the nurse called an ambulance and had the two-pound baby taken to hospital. Because of damage done during the abortion, Gianna now lives with physical disabilities. Doctors predicted that she would be blind, in a persistent vegetative state, or disabled for life — never walking. According to Jessen, some even suggested that she would not want to live in such a condition.

Gianna's biological parents, who were both seventeen, put her up for adoption. When she learned from her adoptive mother the truth behind her premature birth, she became an advocate against abortion. She begins her speeches with this statement, "I was aborted and did not die." She is a Christian, and credits Jesus with preserving her life.

Jessen testified before the United States Congress on April 22, 1996 against partial-birth abortions and again in 2000 in support of the Born Alive Infant Act. She has said, "My biological mother thought she was making a decision affecting only her. If abortion is merely about women's rights, then what were mine?"

In May, 2005, she ran a twenty-six-mile marathon in Nashville, where she lives.

Sources

  • Sarah Womack, "Churchmen back woman who survived being aborted", Daily Telegraph (London, England), December 7, 2005, Pg. 11.
  • Staff, "Abortion survivor gives talk", Daily Mirror (London, England), November 19, 2005
  • The Pilot, Boston, May 2005.
  • Gerald R. McDermott, "The U.S. Senate Should Act To Ban Partial-Birth Abortions- Many Giannas Can Be Saved", Roanoke Times (VA), March 13, 2003, Sec. Editorial, Page 15.
  • Pamela R. Hale, "Woman To Tell Abortion Story - Event: Gianna Jessen, 25, Survived Procedure, Speaks On Alternatives.", Long Beach Press-Telegram (CA), January 25, 2003, Sec. Religion, Pg. A13.

External links

Categories: