Family Secrets:
A Review of the Documentary Offspring
by Paul van der Bijl
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Paul van der Bijl is New Media Manager for The Center for
Bioethics and Culture. |
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Post Date:
October 21, 2003 |
Jefferson Medical College, Philadelphia, 1884. Dr. William
Pancoast and his students gather for class and Dr. Pancoast discusses a case
with them. "One of my patients has a great desire to have children but I have
recently found out that her husband is sterile. What, class, do you think I
should do?" There is a quiet pause in the classroom as the students ponder
their teacher's predicament. One student jokingly offers, "Well, why don't we
just collect semen from the best looking student here?" The class erupts in
laughter but when it dies down, it is Dr. Pancoast who is pondering this
time. After a moment he says seriously, "I think it is a fine plan."1
Though artistic license has been taken here the story is essentially true.
The woman was asked to return to Dr. Pancoast's office under the pretense
that she was to have another exam. After being sedated, she was artificially
inseminated with the student's sperm. She conceived and gave birth to the
first-recorded child ever conceived via donor insemination. She was never to learn the
truth. It seems (for obvious reasons) that secrecy and anonymity has
surrounded the donor insemination (DI) process from the beginning.
Barry Stevens begins his 2001 documentary
Offspring with the following
statement: "About a year ago, I found out that I might have one or even two
hundred half brothers and sisters. I don't know who they are, nor do I know
the man from whose body we were all made." The documentary chronicles the
efforts of filmmaker Stevens to locate his family with the ultimate goal of
finding out who his father was. It takes a unique perspective from a
DI-produced person who was among the first to be conceived in this way in the
early 50's in London by Doctors Berthold Wiesner and Mary Barton. Stevens
suspects that it is Wiesner himself that is his father and he frames the
issue of DI as having as much to do with the rights of the person created by
DI as with the reproductive rights of the woman utilizing DI. Stevens
poignantly describes his predicament by saying, "It's like looking in a
mirror and part of you is not reflected." Early in the documentary he finds
one of his half brothers and together they begin to search for their family.
After a long, painful and sometimes humorous process one of the conclusions
he comes to is that "family bonds do not depend on DNA." While there is
likely a general consensus among our readers that DI is ethically
problematic, we should seek to communicate reasoned responses to this issue
rather than offer knee-jerk negative reactions.
There are some important issues that ought to be addressed in context of this
documentary.
First, What is the proper response to infertility? CBS News suggests that
between 30,000 and 75,000 children are born each year in the United States
via artificial insemination, and reproductive technologies in general boast
big business. (One is hard pressed to find any statistics on DI because of
the continued secrecy surrounding the practice.) Second, Does DI perpetuate
the commodification of reproduction? A recent story in the Chicago Tribune
contained the following quote: "You can find them while surfing the Net.
Select one you like, purchase it with a credit card and have it shipped
overnight. ...you can shop this way for clothes, books, computers ... and
human sperm."2 Third, What does it mean to be a family? It was clear while
watching the documentary that Stevens had a deep desire to know who his
family was and wondered from where this almost seemingly irrational desire
came. Fourth, Does DI undermine the relationship between sexuality and
reproduction? DI is one of the oldest of a growing list of reproductive
technologies that are redefining the meaning of sexuality and reproduction.
As Christians, we have a responsibility to engage our culture and open their
eyes to the dangers inherent in some of the reproductive interventions that
have become increasingly available and accepted. We must strive to
communicate clearly a robust and updated vision of the meaning of sexuality,
reproduction, and the family. This documentary is a great tool to help
educate people on this difficult issue. CBHD
For more information on this documentary, visit:
http://www.cbc.ca/programs/sites/features/offspring/off_main.html or
http://www.sundancechannel.com/popup/index.php?ixFilmID=2635
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Copyright 2003 by The Center for Bioethics and Human
Dignity
The contents of this article do not necessarily reflect the opinions of
CBHD, its staff, board or supporters. Permission to reprint granted as long as The Center for Bioethics and
Human Dignity and the web address for this article is referenced.
This article originally appeared in the Winter 2003 issue of
Dignity.
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