Girl dies for her beliefs

by terafera 31 Replies latest jw friends

  • terafera
    terafera

    Hundreds pay tribute to Jehovah teen who fought against blood
    transfusions.
    By LICIA CORBELLA, EDITOR

    Do not mourn me for I'm not dead.
    I lay asleep upon this bed
    Awaiting the time when I'll arise
    Living in beautiful paradise ...
    I've done my best, fought till the end;
    Now I'm waiting for 'round the bend'
    I know I'll live in perfect peace
    Where everlasting life won't cease.
    No matter what, death do not fear
    For paradise will soon draw near.

    That poem was written by Bethany Hughes just days before her death on
    Thursday, Sept. 5.

    Despite her upbeat words, some 400 people did just that yesterday.
    They gathered at the Kingdom Hall of Jehovah's
    Witnesses on Fairmount Dr. - - which is visible from Lord
    Beaverbrook, the high school she attended -- and mourned the loss of this
    outgoing 17-year-old "freedom fighter," who became a hero around the world
    for many others who share her beliefs.

    Owing to a court order, Bethany came to be known in Calgary and
    beyond as only "the Jehovah's Witness girl" or as Mia (short for the acute
    myeloid leukemia that took her too early.) And yet, although her full name
    and identity was not known for the almost seven months since her diagnosis
    on Feb.13, this city -- indeed thousands around the world -- have taken an
    interest in Bethany who "fought till the end."

    What she fought AGAINST besides her dreaded disease, was court-mandated
    blood transfusions. What she fought FOR was the right for "mature minors" to
    make their own decisions about their own bodies and care.

    "For me, my case is about rights," she told provincial court Judge
    Gail Vickery, during a hearing held at Alberta's Children's Hospital in
    July, in which she won the right to stop being forced to have transfusions,
    which are against her religion.

    "We live in this great country called Canada where you can say
    whatever you want and can write down whatever you want and do whatever you
    want," she said softly.

    "We have a Charter of Rights and Freedoms ... but if you're under 18, you
    don't have freedoms. "In a year, I'd be a citizen, but right now I'm not a
    citizen. I'm almost 17 and I can't make a decision that a person one year
    older than me can make and that upsets me."

    The court battle started after Bethany's distraught father, Lawrence Hughes,
    an architect engineer, disagreed with Bethany's decision to refuse
    transfusions. Ironically, Lawrence admitted yesterday that on Feb.13, the
    day Bethany was diagnosed with leukemia, he read passages from the Bible
    about not "taking blood" in an effort to strengthen Bethany's resolve to
    refuse blood transfusions. What happened instead was HIS views changed.

    That change in interpretation of the scriptures has cost Lawrence Hughes
    virtually everything. He says he has been shunned by his Jehovah's Witness
    friends. His wife, Arliss, and his youngest daughter, Cassandra, 15, moved
    out of the family's home the day he made his beliefs known, and his other
    daughter, Aphalia, 22, barely speaks to him. His legal fees, he says, have
    reached $180,000. But worst of all for him was the limited access he was
    given to Bethany prior to her death.

    As such, Lawrence did not attend his own daughter's funeral yesterday
    "out of respect for Bethany" and the family, although he did follow the
    police escort that closed down portions of Deerfoot Tr. for miles to
    allow for the lengthy procession to make it's way to Queen's Park
    Cemetery, where Bethany's body was laid to rest.

    Church elder Merrill Morrell told the mourners that Bethany frequently
    had nurses phone him while she was strapped to her bed to receive one of
    the 38 blood transfusions she was forced to undergo.

    "I said, 'I'd like to be there to hold your hand.' She said,'well,
    it would have to be my left hand because Jehovah is holding my right hand.'
    "
    Morrell said between 6,000 to 7,000 cards were sent to Bethany from around
    the world and "from every walk of life and religion," thanking her for her
    courage.
    Stan Hill, another JW elder, said Bethany struck all who knew or met her as
    being an "intelligent and articulate young woman," who could read at age
    four and remained a voracious reader her whole life. But mostly, they were
    struck by her kindness, decency and "love for others."

    At the graveside -- with its view of the city -- Bethany's parents shyly
    approached one another and embraced for a long time. Shortly afterwards,
    Bethany's body was buried. But her fight was not.

    Court challenges continue before provincial court and the Supreme Court.
    In other words, Bethany didn't just "fight till the end." She is
    fighting beyond it.

    ~~~~~~~~~

    pathetic.

  • Jesika
    Jesika

    How sad another young person has to die.

  • czarofmischief
    czarofmischief

    What's pathetic about it?

    She's old enough. She knew what she was doing. she took a stand for something she believed in and died bravely for it.

    I know that the blood thing is probably wrong, and she died for a false belief, but at least she thought she knew what she wanted. We should be so lucky.

    CZAR

  • StinkyPantz
    StinkyPantz

    At least she'll never know that she died for a lie. . .

    Czar- What's pathetic is that a family was broken up because a father wanted more than anything to save his child's life.

  • SixofNine
    SixofNine

    Probably wrong?

    It's totally wrong, and she was deceitfully kept from access to information that would prove it so (thereby possibly saving her life). It's not some game that is won by the person who dies with the biggest martyr complex. This is life and death, and your attitude is flippant and disgusting, czar.

    There are three kinda people on this issue.

    Idiots.

    Those who believe the JW position and will not look at anything disconfirming (stupid by virtue of faith).

    And everyone else who knows exactly what stupidity it is based on.

    There are no intelligent people who have looked at all the facts and decided that this is a reasonable doctrine.

  • Perry
    Perry

    Yes, she paid the ultimate price of freedom.

    The WT gets another martyr.

    The poor girl just wanted to try and please everyone....especially God. It is hell to be ignorant.

  • Preston
    Preston
    at least she thought she knew what she wanted.

    It's not a good outlook for one to have if you're dying for a false teaching. I agree, she was a brave person since it does take a lot to die for one's beliefs. Unfortunately, she didn't truly know what she was doing, no matter how brave of a person she was. Personally, I'm glad I matured without having to have this decision set before me because if I was her age when I was a Witness and in her situation, I very well would have died for a false hope. I hope the governing body are proud for what they did to this girl, I hope they burn in hell...

  • JT
    JT

    What is really sad is how in a couple of years a group of guys (all High School graduates--WRITING DEPT) having thier weekly meeting will decide that blood is a conscience matter and was never a mandate from god and this mother will realize what we all realized

    SHE WAS HOODWINKED AND BAMBOOZLED by some guys who used to clean windows and were janitors before going to bethel and working thier way up the wt corp ladder

    how sad

  • concerned mama
    concerned mama

    My heart just bleeds for this whole family. They have to deal with the loss of a beloved daughter, and have been torn apart by the doctrines of the Watchtower Society.

  • Iwasyoungonce
    Iwasyoungonce

    The Father's choice to not attend his daughters funeral was just that his choice. (My deepest sympathy to the whole family.) I just have hope that there will come a day when groups will form that will no longer allow the Watchtower thug mentality to push us from our rights even to properly grive for our loved ones. Funerals are for closure. Even that is taken away from so many. Weddings are another one time event that is used as a control mechanism. I watched as a son invited his mother to his wedding only to create a mockary of her by telling everyone to ignore her and telling her to respect him and not talk to anyone. So sad that people think that the more cruelty you can inflict the more you entertain your god. Personaly I think it is "Baal" mentality. We need to stand up for, and with each other. If there were 5 or 10 or 100 that went to these events holding hands then the wt power that is percived would change. It is how the single person is percived that allows the hate to fester. Anyone in a disfellowshipping hearing should have a support group ready in the wings. The same for a Disassociate. Granted there are some bad people that all should stay away from. But, there are also those who stand up for the little ones and those who like um take a puff, or have an opinion. Really all this is so unbecoming of a human being. But if no one will take a stand, if no one will stand together, then it will go on and on and on.

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