Sumaiya
Saleem exposes the cruel reality of a less talked about murder.
“Mommy!” I
looked up at the two-year-old, who was standing on the threshold; he was simply
adorable, with his unruly black hair, deep blue eyes and red lips, which were
now trembling, as if he was trying hard not to cry. A closer look made me gasp
in horror: his eyes were bright with unshed tears and one of his arms was
missing. His shoulder was bloody, indicating that someone had ripped off his
arm. He was no more than a baby: who could have been cruel and heartless enough
to treat him like this?
As I was gazing
at him, a clamp appeared out of nowhere; it seized his other arm and began
tugging ruthlessly. Tears spilled down the child’s face, as his blood began to
flow down his shirt, dripping to the floor in silent drops. Suddenly, there was
a ripping sound, and his other arm was torn away as well. Both limbs lay on the
floor in a bloody mess, and I couldn’t take my eyes off them. The clamp
re-appeared, and, this time, took hold of his leg. I rushed forward to save him,
but it seemed as if an invisible force was pushing me back. One by one, his
other body parts were ripped apart, resulting in a heap of blood-soaked limbs
and pieces of flesh lying on the floor, until only the face was left.
“Who did this
to you baby?” I asked, tears pouring down my face, as I struggled to go close to
him. The child uttered a soft sigh before replying sadly: “You did, Mommy!” Just
then, his head was crushed by a blow to the skull. I started screaming
hysterically, as the impact of his final words struck me.
My own screams
jerked me awake; I opened my eyes to see everyone staring at me in surprise and
disapproval at creating such a scene in a clinic. I swiveled my head to stare at
the walls that had been spattered with blood in my dreams: they were clean now,
and there was no sign of any of the horrors I had witnessed. “It was just a
dream,” I consoled myself.
Ten minutes
later, I was being ushered into Dr. Khan’s room; it was my second appointment,
so I was at ease with her. Sitting down, my first request to the doctor was to
describe the procedure I would have to undergo for the abortion. I had been
affected by my nightmare, and it was an almost desperate attempt on my part to
convince myself that I wasn’t doing anything wrong.
To my surprise,
the doctor seemed strangely reluctant to explain, and it was only after a lot of
persuasion that she proceeded to inform me that since I was already five months
pregnant, she would be performing a dilation and evacuation procedure on me. It
included sucking the amniotic fluid out of my body and then extracting the fetus
with the help of a clamp. “Do you use a clamp?” I whispered, and when she nodded
in affirmation, all the blood drained from my face. “We do require a clamp
because we cannot extract the entire fetus in one part. We have to detach its
limbs before the evacuation procedure. But don’t worry, Mrs. Ahmed, according to
all the research I have done, the fetus doesn’t register the pain.”
“You’re
planning to rip apart my baby and you have the nerve to tell me you don’t
think it will hurt?” I demanded furiously.
“Pardon me,
Mrs. Ahmed - I was under the impression that it was your decision to have your
baby aborted,” she replied.
“I didn’t know.
I never imagined it would be this terrible, this cruel,” I whispered.
“What
did you think it would be? Do you think it’s easy to extract a live
human being from the uterus, where it’s clinging, and not harm it in the
process? It’s not easy for me either, you know. But it’s my job, and I only
perform this operation when I get a request from the parents. I did tell you
that you were too far along and it was unadvisable to have an abortion at this
stage, but you insisted.” The doctor’s words, uttered in an icy tone, froze me
in my tracks. I was quite willing to put the blame on her and had forgotten who
had set the ball rolling in the first place.
I was the
child’s mother. I was supposed to protect him. It was my blood the baby was
thriving on. This child was the flesh of my flesh, and I had carried it beneath
my heart for five months. If I could so callously decide to tear it from my womb
and discard it like rubbish, how could the doctor pity me? “Maybe you need time
to think it over,” Dr. Khan suggested in a softer tone, but I was disgusted at
the idea of thinking over whether or not I wanted to kill my child.
Fifteen minutes
later, I was home. The ride had passed in a blur, as I stared out of the window,
unconsciously wiping away the tears that were rolling down my face. The fact
that I had not known of the exact procedure did not absolve me of guilt. I
should have asked for more information before taking such a momentous decision.
However, I was so worried about my life being disrupted by an unplanned
pregnancy that I had never thought of the being in my body as a living entity, a
part of both me and my husband. I had viewed it merely as an inconvenience. My
dream had opened my eyes to the realization that my womb held not just a
lifeless clump of cells but a baby, who might have inherited my black curls and
my husband’s dimple.
“Mommy, I is
here,” the baby announced, and I turned to the door with a welcoming smile on my
lips, throwing out my arms so that Ammar could run into them. I held him close,
smelling the clean baby scent of him; it had been almost two years since my
visit to Dr. Khan and my decision not to abort my child. Now, he was eighteen
months old, a laughing child with ebony curls, flashing blue eyes, the cutest
dimple and the ability to wind me around his little finger. He was the exact
replica of the baby I had seen in my dream; as I listened to his gurgles and
baby talk, I shuddered to think what might have happened, if I had not had that
nightmare. It was Allah’s (swt) blessing that my son was here and not in a heap
of bloody limbs in some gutter.
Every night
since that horrific vision, I had thanked Allah (swt) that he had saved me from
the Kabira (major) sin of killing my own child. The Ayat of the Quran flashed in
my mind:
“And kill not
your children for fear of poverty. We provide for them and for you. Surely, the
killing of them is a great sin.” (Al-Isra, 17:31)
Mother Teresa
had once remarked: “In every abortion, there are two victims: a dead baby and a
dead conscience.” I had been saved from murdering both my baby and my
conscience.
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