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Eddie Mhlanga, devout Christian doctor who fought for abortion rights

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In South Africa, as in the United States, faith and reproductive choice are often seen as opposing corners. But Dr. Eddie Mhlanga walked a middle road, and did what he could to bring others along with him.

Dr. Mhlanga, who died Feb. 5, was a devout, born-again Christian who had a powerful change of heart in the 1980s after performing an emergency operation on a colleague who had had a botched illegal abortion.

Why We Wrote This

As debates continue to rage around abortion, one man’s life example shows that compassion can thrive even amid fierce disagreement.

The grief from watching a colleague die in such a way propelled him to become a key advocate for the bill that would become South Africa’s Choice on Termination of Pregnancy law. Today, it’s one of Africa’s most comprehensive abortion laws, and an international model, although high rates of deaths from unsafe abortions persist because of stigma and a lack of access.

Dr. Tlaleng Mofokeng, who was inspired to become an abortion-rights activist by Dr. Mhlanga, wrote a tribute to his life. “He saw his practice of medicine as an act of love and devotion – his patients felt it and his students learnt it.”

JOHANNESBURG

In October 1996, as South Africa’s National Assembly found itself embroiled in bitter debate over a bill to legalize abortion, a soft-spoken doctor from the country’s Department of Health stood up to speak.

“I am a born-again Christian, amen,” began Dr. Eddie Mhlanga, the department’s director of maternal health. And then he began to tell a conversion story of another kind.

As a young doctor in the early 1980s, he explained, he had operated on a colleague following a botched informal abortion. Then, he said, he asked for help.

Why We Wrote This

As debates continue to rage around abortion, one man’s life example shows that compassion can thrive even amid fierce disagreement.

“Every day I was at her bedside praying that God would have mercy on her,” he explained to the members of Parliament, who had gathered to consider whether South Africa should roll back an apartheid-era law that had made abortion almost entirely illegal in the country.

Two weeks later, Dr. Mhlanga’s colleague died, one of around 400 women that year to die after informal abortions. “It was my road to Damascus,” he later wrote.

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