Mona Sahlin, the national coordinator against violent extremism, proclaimed in February at a conference on religion and democracy that the “one who refuses to participate in abortions is an extreme religious practitioner,” one who is simply “on a different level from the Islamic State” — that is, a pro-life medical practitioner is like ISIS, just not as extreme.
Sweden is known for its spirit of consensus. We seek compromise, which often is the lowest common denominator of the majority view. This approach has led to a country with relatively few social conflicts but requiring a large degree of subservience.
Even as Sweden becomes increasingly pluralistic and the traditional institution of the state church has been abolished, the desire for cultural unity remains. Today, a new kind of state religion is demanding enforcing social conformity.
Take the example of midwife Ellinor Grimmark. In 2013 she was denied an extension of her contract at Höglandssjukhuset women’s clinic in southern Sweden because she refused to perform abortions. She told the women’s clinic at the hospital that she believes life begins at conception. In a voicemail from the head of the maternity ward, Grimmark was swiftly informed that she “was no longer welcome to work with them” — despite a large need for more medical staff — and was challenged about “whether a person with [pro-life] views actually can become a midwife.”
After taking her case against the county to the Jönköping district court, Grimmark has been all but condemned by various sectors of Swedish society. The Swedish Association of Health Professionals has offered no support, owing to its own pro-abortion convictions. Only one hospital offered her “assistance,” and it was for a counselor to help her “overcome her aversion to abortion” — that is, for psychological treatment and reeducation in the consensus norm. Sweden prides itself on being a tolerant nation, but its new state religion leaves little room for ‘heretics.’
On the issue of whether those such as Grimmark should be allowed conscientious-objection rights, the former operations manager at the county hospital’s orthopedic clinic in Kalmar, on Sweden’s east coast, threatened that he “would gladly stand in the front with a baseball bat to prevent this development.” He added that “those who want clauses for conscientious objection should not work in health care.”
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