“No disability is without hope”

As 50 years of the Abortion Act approaches, we are looking again at some moving stories of people whose lives have been deeply impacted by abortion.

This is Hilary McDowell’s story, first published in 2014. She died in December 2015.

Hilary McDowell is a successful dramatist, writer and broadcaster. She has also had multiple disabilities since birth and was given a life expectancy of just three weeks.

Doctors said she would never walk and possibly never speak but today her success in many fields means she travels the globe for writing and speaking engagements.

Speaking to The Christian Institute for our ‘Choose Life’ series she says: “Every child deserves life”.

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Transformed

When she was born doctors told her mother: “‘Take her home and love her and bury her because even if she did live’, the doctors said, ‘she would have no quality of life’”.

Today, although she still has some problems with walking, hearing and her sight, she is an author of five books and a performance poet among many other things.

She feels she has many reasons to be positive saying God “got inside the situation and transformed it from inside”.

Heartbreak

She feels great sympathy for the “tragedy and the heartbreak” experienced by mothers of severely disabled children.

But she believes “no disability is without hope”, and encourages mothers to consider the benefit of carrying their baby to term so that even if the baby doesn’t survive, they can still say: ‘I gave it life in me for nine months’”.

“Every child deserves life” she concludes. “I’m wanting in a humble way to be the voice of the baby, crying out and saying: ‘I’m here, I’m alive, I want to live’”.

Read more stories about people who chose life.

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