The Alberta government is being urged to investigate the state of the provinceâs sexual education curriculum after an anti-abortion group showed a video comparing abortion to the Holocaust to students at a Catholic high school in Red Deer, Alta. in March.
The three-minute video titled âThe Case Against Abortion: Personhoodâ was presented by a member of the organization Red Deer and Area Pro Life during a presentation to a Grade 10 class at École Secondaire Notre Dame.
In text scrolling across the screen, the videoâs authors draw a parallel between abortion and âHitlerâs schemeâ in 1939 âby which severely disabled children could be murdered.â The video, produced by an agency called Abort73, goes on to defend human embryos and fetuses as having a âpersonal, rational nature.â
The Abort73 website indicates that it is a non-profit online resource âdesigned to creatively and comprehensively educate students about the injustice of abortion.â
Albertaâs Education Minister David Eggen told CTVâs Red Deer Bureau on Tuesday that a student brought the presentation to his attention. He said the ministry was forced to tell the Red Deer Catholic Regional School Division about the videoâs use in its schools.
âWe were the ones that informed them, which I found quite concerning, because itâs their responsibility to ensure the integrity of what is being used in their classrooms,â said Eggen.
Eggen described the presentation as âhateful propagandaâ and that it has no place in a publicly-funded school.
âIf this is taking place in any other classrooms across the province, I want to hear about it,â he said. âThe presentation was inappropriate and misleading, using incorrect information and quite frankly frightening.â
The school division has since banned that particular video after discussions with the minister but the Red Deer and Area Pro Life group is still allowed to present in the classrooms. However, the division said they would be taking additional steps to screen outside agencies in a statement emailed to Âéśš´ŤĂ˝.
âThe intended outcome of this presentation was to teach our students that human life must be respected and protected,â the statement said. âThe division has requested Red Deer and Area Pro Life make adjustments to their presentations to ensure itâs more appropriate for students.â
Guy Pelletier, a board chairperson for the school division, said in a follow-up email that the anti-abortion group delivers presentations to the Grade 10 religion class once per term.
Anti-abortion group responds
A spokesperson for Red Deer and Area Pro Life, Joel Soodsma, said he understands why some viewers might find their video disturbing, but they stand by the comparison.
âWill we continue to show that video? Probably not. Will we continue to use that example, that comparison? Definitely so,â Soodsma said during a phone interview CTV Edmontonâs Red Deer Bureau. âWe believe itâs a fair comparison, and when you look in history at people, groups that were denied legal protection, the atrocities are horrendous.â
Soodsma called Eggenâs label of the video as hateful propaganda âdisturbingâ and said he hopes the government changes its stance on sexual education in public schooling.
âI canât see it as propaganda. Itâs certainly a political agenda,â he said. âWeâd like to see the law changed.â
More provincial oversight
Cristina Stasia, the founder of the organization Assessing Information not Myths (AIM), which claims to address âgaps in the Alberta education curriculumâ on their website, said sheâs concerned about the incident in Red Deer.
âWe do know that students have complained about this group and presentation in the past and we know this group presented to the teachers during a PD day and the teachers went to the principal and brought their concerns forward,â Stasia said. âThere were alarm bells raised before but this group is allowed to continue to present in schools anyway.â
The AIM founder described the anti-abortion groupâs video as âfear-basedâ and âmedically inaccurate.â She said the members of her organization were frustrated when they learned about the presentation and the information it shared to students.
âIn Catholic school systems discussions of abortions and reproductive rights are important but giving students misinformation, giving them medically inaccurate information, scientifically inaccurate information, myths, shaming sexual assault survivors, thatâs not part of having an honest conversation,â Stasia said.
AIM is calling for more provincial oversight and intervention in the sexual education curriculum to ensure that students receive correct information.
The education minister said heâs working on adjustments to the Health and Sexual Education curriculum but that theyâre dealing with this incident first. Eggen said the Red Deer Catholic Regional School Division has been asked to explain how and why the video presentation occurred.
With a report from CTVâs Red Deer Bureauâs Taylor Oseen