Tell Congress to expand abortion access, not limit it.
Roe v. Wade, the constitutional right to abortion access, would have turned 50 on January 22, 2023.
Instead, the Supreme Court overturned this right, leaving it to individual states or Congress to decide the fate of our right to reproductive healthcare.
Please join us and email your lawmakers encouraging them to pass legislation that expands abortion access instead of limiting it.
It is painful and poignant to mark this day, now — the non-anniversary of a decision that was meant to be the floor of our reproductive rights, but is now their former ceiling. 24 states have now banned abortion or are about to do so — violating the dignity, autonomy, safety, and humanity of 40 million Americans of reproductive age.
Narratives in this country have long held that people of faith do not support abortion access, but this is a harmful myth, casting off the beliefs of Jews and many other religious beliefs, faith traditions, and moral principles.
Jewish tradition tells us to honor kavod habriot, the dignity of every human being. We support access to safe and legal abortion care. Not in spite of our religion — but because of it.
Send an email to your lawmakers encouraging them to pass legislation, like the EACH Act, that expands abortion access for everyone.
Tell Congress to expand abortion access, not limit it.
Roe v. Wade, the constitutional right to abortion access, would have turned 50 on January 22, 2023.
Instead, the Supreme Court overturned this right, leaving it to individual states or Congress to decide the fate of our right to reproductive healthcare.
Please join us and email your lawmakers encouraging them to pass legislation that expands abortion access instead of limiting it.
It is painful and poignant to mark this day, now — the non-anniversary of a decision that was meant to be the floor of our reproductive rights, but is now their former ceiling. 24 states have now banned abortion or are about to do so — violating the dignity, autonomy, safety, and humanity of 40 million Americans of reproductive age.
Narratives in this country have long held that people of faith do not support abortion access, but this is a harmful myth, casting off the beliefs of Jews and many other religious beliefs, faith traditions, and moral principles.
Jewish tradition tells us to honor kavod habriot, the dignity of every human being. We support access to safe and legal abortion care. Not in spite of our religion — but because of it.