Generational shift for U.S. Hispanics on abortion
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - A few weeks after a one-night stand and a failed morning-after pill, Ana saw only one option: Two days later she had her pregnancy terminated at a free clinic.
The 28-year-old graduate student, who came to the United States from Guatemala when she was a toddler, called it one of the easiest, clearest decisions of her life. "Having a child is not in my plans right now," Ana said in an interview from New York City.
Her mother, while supportive, exclaimed "Why didn't you just tell me and I would have taken care of your baby?"
Ana, who requested her real name not be used, has not told her father, who would be "heartbroken," she said.
Ana and her family reflect the changing attitudes toward abortion among U.S. Hispanics -- traditionally an anti-abortion group influenced by their predominant Roman Catholic faith.
A 2007 joint survey by the respected Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life and the Pew Hispanic Center shows that 65 percent of first-generation U.S. Hispanics believe abortion should be illegal. But among second-generation U.S. Hispanics like Ana, that percentage drops to 43 percent.
The topic of Hispanics and abortion is a timely one as Sonia Sotomayor, the first Hispanic nominee to the U.S. Supreme Court, began her Senate confirmation on Monday.
Sotomayor's position on abortion is not clear, even after groups on both sides of the issue have scrutinized her record and background in search for clues. Sotomayor may be asked directly about her stance at the hearings or through secondary questions like her views on privacy.
Decades after the Supreme Court's 1973 landmark ruling in Roe v. Wade that legalized abortion, the issue is still bitterly divisive and at the forefront of political battles. Knowing how Hispanics view abortion could be key to getting votes from the largest and fastest growing minority group.
TABOO FALLS AWAY
A May Gallup poll found that 51 percent of Americans called themselves "pro-life," or against abortion. But the Pew survey indicates that a higher percentage of Hispanics oppose abortion -- 57 percent -- or more than any other group.
The second generation, however, is "much, much closer to mainstream American values ... in stark contrast to the first generation who are much more conservative on this issue," said Luis Lugo, director of the Pew Forum.
The numbers back up the changing view. Hispanics constitute about 15 percent of the U.S. population, but Hispanic women accounted for 22 percent of the 1.2 million U.S. abortions in 2005, according to the Guttmacher Institute.
There are many assumptions on how Latinos feel about abortion, said Silvia Henriquez, executive director of the National Latina Institute for Reproductive Health. Polls by her group reveal more tolerance toward it.
"It's very much 'Maybe I wouldn't make that decision myself, but it's not my place to interfere in someone else's decision'," said Henriquez. Continued...
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