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- From: chrisl@stpaul.gov (Chris A Lyman)
- Subject: The Best of Enemies - John Dee
- Message-ID: <1992Nov19.195417.10578@pwcs.stpaul.gov>
- Sender: news@pwcs.stpaul.gov (USENET news administration)
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- Organization: City of Saint Paul Public Works
- Distribution: na
- Date: Thu, 19 Nov 1992 19:54:17 GMT
- Lines: 80
-
- The following is an excerpt from the article, "The Best of Enemies," by Katy
- Reckdahl. It was published in the 11/18 issue of Twin Cities Reader and is
- reprinted without permission. The article explores the relationships that
- have sprung up between members of opposing sides at the Robbinsdale Clinic
- abortion protest. It also includes thumb-nail sketches of some of the
- principal participants. This is one:
-
- ******************************************************************************
-
- In 1988, "Father" John Dee, director of Ministry OK, began parking his camper,
- a battered '70s-vintage Krager Koach, in front of abortion clinics and
- operating a "counseling center" from it. He has recently upgraded to a 1984
- Winnebago, but the sign outside still reads, "Free Abortion Options
- Counseling Service."
-
- Dee and his Winnebago pull up to the Robbinsdale clinic every Thursday and
- almost every Saturday. His priest garb almost always draws taunts from the
- pro-choice side regarding his dubious status in the Catholic church. The
- Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis does not recognize Dee as a
- practicing priest since he married a nun in 1972.
-
- But Dee, 54, cautions that his history can be too easily misconstrued. "Take
- my definitions of love, don't build on a sensational, 'Oh, here's a married
- priest that is considered to be excommunicated.' That would be a total
- falsity. I broke some penal laws of the church, I break penal laws of the
- state, but I will not break a moral law - if I can help it."
-
- Dee was recently sentenced to a six-month jail term for violating the 12-
- person limit at the Robbinsdale clinic. He will start serving his term on
- the day after Thanksgiving.
-
- As a war protester in the 60's and the 70's, Dee broke other laws, traveling
- as far as Vietnam to chain himself to the gates of the American embassy in
- Saigon. He protested at the 1968 Democratic National Convention in Chicago,
- but complains that he wasn't heard, "while Abbie Hoffman - with his vulgar
- language - was." Dee makes it very clear that Abbie Hoffman's lifestyle led
- the radical to where he is today: Dead.
-
- After they married, Dee and his wife Lu, travelled the country. She sang
- and played piano; he accompanied her on the guitar. "I played mostly folk
- music - 'Where Have All the Flowers Gone?.' I'm back in that era." He
- would also go into bars and coffee shops, set up a movie machine and two
- slide projectors, and proceed to do a religious program and a two-hour
- antiwar program.
-
- The Roe v. Wade decision had just made abortion legal when Dee found out
- that Lu was pregnant. Dee was having fun on the road and didn't want any
- children - but abortion violated one of his most basic moral laws. Because
- abortions were a legal temptation at the time, he considers his daughter
- "an abortion survivor."
-
- "You need to teach the moral law that adultery is wrong - fornication is
- wrong," he says. "I learned this myself. Even the aroma of the act of
- intercourse outside of marriage is different than in."
-
- Unlike many pro-life fundamentalists, Dee is not opposed to all artificial
- birth control. He reserves his ire, and his conspiracy theories, for
- certain providers of abortions. "If Planned Parenthood, run by the feminists,
- would have their way, they would allow any type of reason for birth control
- of any type, especially abortion," he says. "Certainly they would turn the
- scales around, and try to perform abortions so that 80% would be female
- babies and only 20% males."
-
- Dee says that he often tries to engage the pro-choice people in conversation,
- but they don't always cooperate. "The moment I start talking about life and
- the principles of life, they start chanting these little high-school chants -
- some of them are very blasphemous," he says. "And now because one of the
- guards has testified against me in court [for violating the restraining
- order], it's making our relationship a little strained."
-
- ******************************************************************************
-
- I think that it's helpful for participants in the abortion debate to be able
- to see members of the opposing side as people, so if there is interest, I
- will be posting more of these sketches.
-
- --
- Chris Lyman / email: chrisl@pwcs.stpaul.gov / standard disclaimers
- "Nearly all men can stand adversity, but if you want to test a man's
- character, give him power." -- Abraham Lincoln
-