Abortionist
Turned Pro-Life Apostle

Stojan Adasevic will never forget the day he was organizing the filing
cabinet in the doctors’ room. He was a medical student at the time. A
number of gynecologists entered the room. Paying no attention to the
student crouched over a pile of papers in the corner, they began
swapping stories about their medical practice.
Dr. Rado Ignatovic recalled a patient who had come to him for an
abortion. The procedure failed because the doctor had been unable to
align the cervix. As the gynecologists went on discussing the woman’s
history, Stojan, who had been listening in, suddenly stiffened. He
realized that the woman under discussion — a former dentist at the
nearby clinic — was his mother.
“She’s dead now” — observed one of the doctors — but I wonder what
happened to the unwanted child?”
Stojan couldn’t resist. “I’m the child!” he said, getting up. Silence
fell over the room. Seconds later the doctors were walking out.
Over the years Dr. Adasevic would have cause to recall that event many
times. It was perfectly clear to him: he owed his life to the fact of a
failed abortion. He would never make such a blunder himself. Many women
were referred to him because of difficulty in aligning the cervix. This
was never a problem for Stojan. He became the best abortionist in
Belgrade. Before long he had surpassed his master in the profession —
Dr. Ignatovic, to whose incompetence he owed his life.
“The secret lies in training the hand through frequent procedures” he
would say, citing the German proverb: Übung macht Meister
(practice makes perfect). Faithful to this maxim, he would perform from
twenty to thirty abortions a day. His record was thirty-five abortions
in one day. Today he has difficulty reckoning up the abortions he
performed in his twenty-six years of practice. He estimates anywhere
between 48,000 and 62,000.
For years he remained convinced that abortion, as taught in the medical
faculties and textbooks, was a surgical procedure not unlike that of
removing an appendix. The only difference was in the organ removed: a
piece of intestine in the one case, and embryonic tissue in the other.
Doubts began to arise during the 1980s when ultrasound technology came
to Yugoslavian hospitals. It was then that Adasevic first saw on the
USG monitor what had until then been invisible to him — the inside of a
woman’s womb, a live child, sucking its thumb, moving its arms and
legs. As often as not, fragments of that child would soon be lying on
the table beside him.
“I saw without seeing — he recalls today. — Everything changed after I
started having the dreams”.
Dr. Adasevic’s dreams
Actually, it was the same recurring dream. It haunted him every night,
day after day, week after week, month after month. He dreamed he was
walking in a sunlit meadow. Beautiful flowers grew all around. The air
was thick with colored butterflies. It was warm and pleasant, yet,
despite this, some anxious feeling oppressed him. Suddenly the meadow
was filled with laughing and running children. They were playing ball.
In age, they ranged from three or four to about twenty years. All were
strikingly beautiful. One boy in particular, and two of the girls,
seemed strangely familiar, but he could not recall where he had seen
them. When he tried to speak to them, they ran off in terror,
screaming. The entire scene was presided over by a man in a black habit
who watched intently in silence.
Every night Adasevic would wake in terror and stay awake till morning.
Herbal remedies and pills were useless. One night, he became distraught
in his dream and began chasing the fleeing children. He caught one of
them, but the child cried out in terror: “Help! Murderer! Save me from
the murderer!” At that moment the man dressed in black, turned into an
eagle, swept down, and pulled the child away. The doctor woke up, his
heart thumping like a hammer in his ribs. The room was cold, yet he was
hot, drenched in sweat. In the morning he decided to see a
psychiatrist. Since there were no immediate openings, he booked an
appointment. That night he decided he would ask the man in his dreams
to identify himself. This he did. The stranger said: “Even if I told
you, my name would mean nothing to you”. When the doctor persisted, the
man finally replied: “I am called Thomas Aquinas”. Indeed, the name
meant nothing to Adasevic. It was the first time he had heard it. The
man in black continued: “Why don’t you ask who the children are. Don’t
you recognize them?” When the doctor said he didn’t, he replied: “Not
true. You know them very well. These are the children you killed while
performing abortions”. “How is that possible?” countered Adasevic.
“These are grown children. I have never killed born children”. Thomas
replied: “Do you not know that here, on this side of the eschaton,
children continue to grow?” The Doctor refused to yield: “But I have
never killed a twenty-year-old boy”. “You killed him twenty years ago”
replied the monk, “when he was three months old”.
It was then that Adasevic recognized the faces of the twenty-year-old
boy and the two girls. They resembled people he knew well, for whom he
had performed abortions over the years. The boy looked like a close
friend of Adasevic’s. Stojan had performed the abortion on his wife
twenty years ago. In the two girls the doctor recognized their mothers,
one of whom happened to be Stojan’s cousin. Upon awaking, he decided he
would never perform another abortion in his life.
I held a beating heart in my hand
Waiting for him upon his arrival at the hospital that morning was a
cousin along with his girlfriend. They had booked an abortion with him.
Four months pregnant, the woman was about to do away with her ninth
consecutive child. Adasevic refused, but his cousin was so importunate
that he gave in: OK, but this was the very last time.
On the USG monitor he clearly saw the child with its thumb in its
mouth. Stretching the uterus, he inserted the forceps, took hold of
something, and pulled. In the jaws of the forceps was a little arm. He
placed it on the table, but in such a way that one of the limbs’ nerve
endings touched a drop of spilled iodine. Suddenly, the arm began to
twitch. The nurse standing beside him almost screamed out. Just like
frogs’ legs in a physiology lab!
Adasevic shuddered, but went on with the abortion. Again he inserted
the forceps, gripped, and pulled. This time it was a leg. Just as he
was thinking: “Better not let it touch that drop of alcohol”, a nurse
standing behind him dropped a tray of surgical instruments. Startled by
the crash, the doctor released the forceps, and the leg landed right
beside the arm. It too began to move.
The staff had never seen anything like it: human limbs twitching on the
table. Adasevic decided to mash up what was left in the womb, and pull
it out in a formless mass. He began mashing, squashing, crushing. Upon
withdrawing the forceps, now certain that he had reduced everything to
a pulp, he produced a human heart! The organ was still beating. Weaker
and weaker it beat, until it stopped altogether. It was then that he
realized he had killed a human being.
The world turned dark around him. He cannot recall how long this
lasted. Suddenly he felt a tug on his arm. A nurse’s terrified voice
called out: Doctor Adasevic! Doctor Adasevic! The patient was bleeding.
For the first time in years, the doctor began praying earnestly: “Lord!
Save not me, but this woman”.
Normally it could take up to ten minutes to clean the womb of all
remaining embryonic matter. This time two insertions of the instrument
through the vagina were enough to complete the task. When Adasevic
removed his gloves, he knew this was the last abortion he would ever
perform.
The pail: instrument of abortion
When Stojan informed the head of the hospital of his decision, there
was a considerable stir. Never before in a Belgrade hospital had a
gynecologist refused to perform abortions. Pressure was brought to bear
on him. They cut his salary in half. His daughter was fired from her
job. His son “failed” his university entrance examinations. He was
attacked in the press and on television. The Socialist State — they
said — had provided him with an education so that he could perform
abortions, and now he was carrying out sabotage against the State.
Two years of persecution brought him to the brink of nervous
exhaustion. He was on the point of asking the hospital administrator to
reassign him to abortion duty, when Thomas Aquinas appeared to him in a
dream. Patting him on his shoulder, Thomas said: “You are my good
friend. Continue your struggle”. Adasevic did not go to the
administrator. He decided to fight on.
He got involved in the pro-life movement. He traveled throughout
Serbia, lecturing and giving talks on abortion. Twice he succeeded in
airing on Yugoslav state television Bernard Nathanson’s The Silent
Scream, a USG recording of an actual abortion. In the early 1990s,
thanks largely to Adasevic’s activism, the Yugoslav parliament passed a
decree protecting the rights of the unborn. The decree went to
President Slobodan Milosevic, who refused to sign it. Then the war
broke out, and the decree fell into abeyance.
As for the war, Adasevic wonders: “To what else can we attribute the
slaughter that took place here in the Balkans if not our alienation
from God and lack of respect for human life”.
And to make his point he describes what is common practice in Serbia:
“Since our laws protect the life of the child only from the moment of
its first breath, that is, from the instant it utters its first cry,
abortions are legal in the seventh, eighth, and even ninth month of
pregnancy. Actually the word “abortion” has no place here, since it
applies more to miscarriages. Beside the birthing seat stands a bucket
of water. Before the child has a chance to utter a cry, you stop up its
mouth and plunge it under water. Officially this is an abortion, and it
is all perfectly legal, since the child never draws a breath”.
Here Adasevic likes to cite Mother Teresa of Calcutta: “if a mother can
kill her own child, what is there to prevent you and me from killing
one another?”
Today, most abortions are performed in private clinics, which do not
release figures on aborted pregnancies. Adasevic estimates that for
every twenty-five children conceived barely one live birth results.
Twenty-four beings are destroyed.
“What further complicates statistical analysis in this area — he
observes — is the use of abortifacients such as the IUD and the
RU-486 pill, which are officially classified as contraceptives. The IUD
is an abortifacient; for the coil acts as a sword, which
severs the tiny human being from its source of food in the womb. It is
a terrible death. A human being dies of starvation in a place that is
filled with nourishment.
“This is a real war, waged by the born upon the unborn — he adds. — In
this war I have crossed the front several times: first as an unborn
child condemned to die, then as an abortionist myself, and now as a
pro-life apostle.
“I have also become interested in the life of Thomas Aquinas, about
whom I knew nothing before. I have often wondered why he appeared in my
dream, and not other saints, especially since he is a Catholic saint,
and I am Orthodox. To explain this, I started studying Thomas’
writings. Guess what I found? According to Aquinas, human life
begins 40 days after fertilization in the case of men, and 80 days in
the case of women. So what is a child in those preceding days? Nothing?
I think what Thomas said gives him no peace in the eschaton. Mind you,
it should be stated that Thomas accepted this view from Aristotle.
Aristotle was the great authority then. Thomas allowed himself to be
influenced by his view, and committed an error.
“It was a long time before I grasped the fact that a child in the
mother’s womb is a living person, that it is a living person not from
the time it draws its first breath, as the communist professors taught
us, but from the instant the human embryo is formed, that is, from the
moment the spermatozoon joins with the egg cell”.
Grzegorz Gorny
Originally published in Love One
Another Catholic Magazine, No. 1/2004 dedicated to the New
Evangelization. An abbreviated form of this article appeared in
the Polish secular
daily Rzeczpospolita (1 December 2003). Used with Permission.