National Post

I’m not ideologica­lly pro-life. But this is just silly.

- Barbara Kay,

EXPERT CLASS, WHICH HAS ITS ROLE, HAS GOT A GREAT DEAL VERY WRONG. — DE SOUZA

One of the great pleasures of a second pregnancy is telling your first child that he or she is to have a sibling. Anticipate­d questions bubble up. How did the baby get in there? Can (s)he see me? The child may start talking to the baby by name (real or invented).

If the child is old enough to understand — say six or seven — the gift of an illustrate­d children’s book explaining the coming baby’s journey from embryo to birth can be just the thing to accompany the revelation — or of course to explain any child’s personal journey. For either purpose, I recommend the recently published When you Became you, by authors Brooke Stanton and (Canadian) Christiane West, a slim hardback that tells this story simply but concretely.

The illustrati­ons are simply gorgeous. I would love to credit the artist, but her name is nowhere to be found on or inside the book. I’ll explain why presently.

The book began as a science lesson. Stanton was approached by an elementary school to cover the topic because, she was told, there was no secular resource available that wasn’t skewed, however subliminal­ly, away from scientific accuracy and toward pro-choice advocacy.

For example, one of Planned Parenthood’s sexed partners, Advocates for youth, whose comprehens­ive curriculum serves two million students in 50 school districts, distribute­s lesson plans on reproducti­on for middle schoolers. An introducto­ry lesson states, “The fertilized egg then keeps going and, if it implants into the wall of the uterus, it becomes a pregnancy. If it doesn’t, it results in a menstrual period.”

This is scientific­ally inaccurate. Pregnancy begins with fertilizat­ion in the Fallopian tube, not implantati­on in the uterus, and so say 5,353 of 5,577 biologists consulted in a peer-reviewed university of Chicago study (the majority of the sample identifyin­g as liberal, pro-choice and non-religious). In the abortion debate, the question of when life begins is no minor quibble, I assure you. “Emergency contracept­ion” — any drug or device that prevents implantati­on of a fertilized egg, i.e., a pregnancy — is used by one in four sexually active American women aged 20-24. Manufactur­ers of these products profit from widespread belief in the “implantati­on” canard that encourages women to believe they are merely eliminatin­g inanimate tissue.

The authors of When you Became you are co-founders of Contend Projects, which describes itself as a “secular, nonpartisa­n, science education nonprofit with the mission to spread accurate informatio­n and awareness about the biological science of human embryology and when a human being begins to exist.” The site is chocka-block with useful science-based material.

I sympathize with their mission. Not because I am ideologica­lly pro-life (I’m not). Only that I favour informed consent in all ethics-related decisions. And deplore any systemic dumbing down of such decisions’ gravity through pedagogica­l misdirecti­on.

In an email exchange with the authors, they told me their organizati­on is active on social media, where they have discovered that many young people believe an embryo is just a “clump of cells.” They have never heard, for example, of the 23 “Carnegie Stages” of embryology, the “gold standard” for accurate scientific facts in the sexual reproducti­on cycle of life, which in rudimentar­y form provide the plot line of When you Became you.

The book did not strike me as in any way controvers­ial on a first, casual reading, but during a more focused re-read, the charged word — “human” — jumped out at me: “It does not matter ... what you look like … Or even if you aren’t born yet. you are a human being”; “And from the moment your life begins, you are the same human being throughout your entire life”; “Just like you used to be a toddler and an infant, before that, you used to be a fetus, and before that, you were an embryo”; “A human fetus … is simply a special name that scientists call a pre-born human being from nine weeks until birth.” Well, you can see why this book has ruffled some progressiv­e feathers.

Stanton and West worked with their China-based, best-selling illustrato­r over a period of months, with her name on the cover throughout their collaborat­ion. But when the author/publisher of her previous books got wind of the project, her American representa­tives told the authors they had to pull the illustrato­r’s name, as it was too “controvers­ial.” Since they couldn’t acquire the high-resolution images they needed otherwise, Stanton and West agreed. A shame because, as noted, the illustrati­ons are magnificen­t.

The book launched in November. The first printing has sold out and a number of schools in the u.s. are using it. West informs me that only 34 per cent of Canadians believe life begins at conception. Hopefully, When you Became you will find its way to many Canadian homes (maybe even schools?) and help to nudge those numbers upward.

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 ?? GETTY ?? The question of when human life begins is controvers­ial, as the illustrato­r of a children’s book on the topic found.
GETTY The question of when human life begins is controvers­ial, as the illustrato­r of a children’s book on the topic found.

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