“I Felt That I Had Saved My Own Life”: A Polish Woman’s Harrowing Story of Illegal Abortion

On March 14, 2023, the Polish activist Justyna Wydrzyńska was convicted of “intent to aid” an abortion. Wydrzyńska is a prominent abortion rights activist in Poland, and in February 2020, she was contacted by Ania (a pseudonym), a woman who was desperate for help accessing medication abortion. Ania’s situation was tragic and complicated, and Wydrzyńska was moved by her pleas. She had a pack of abortion pills in her home and sent it to Ania via a courier service, but before Ania could take them, her partner discovered the pills and reported it to the police.

Wydrzyńska was charged in late 2021 and her trial dragged on for a year. With the guilty verdict, she became the first activist in Europe convicted for this type of crime. Her case has attracted international attention, in part because it reflected a new frontier in abortion prosecutions—targeting activists. During the trial, vague details about Ania, and what inspired Wydrzyńska to mail her the pills, filtered out, but Ania has never gone on the record to share what led her to ask for help.

In this exclusive US interview with The Nation, Ania tells her story publicly, in her own words, for the first time. It’s a story of determination, of fear, of solidarity, of loneliness, and of gratitude. It’s also a story of the visceral harm that abortion bans inflict on women, and the lengths people will go to end pregnancies they cannot carry. This interview has been edited for length and clarity.

By Ania

as told to Rebecca Grant

A little more than three years ago, my whole life and opinions and worldviews changed completely. I would never have suspected that I would have an unwanted pregnancy and would have taken the decision to terminate it. This way of thinking lasted until the day of [my own experience].

I became pregnant in December 2019. It was both a planned and wanted pregnancy, as I had this dream to give a sibling to my 3-year-old child. On the first day of January 2020, my pregnancy symptoms became so severe that I was forced to lie down. I was vomiting more and more, and the pain in my stomach was getting worse every day. On January 10, 2020, I went to a gynecologist to confirm the pregnancy, and this is a day I will remember until the end of my life.

On the monitor of the ultrasound machine, I saw two embryos during the examination, and I felt a wave of weakness. I knew exactly what was in front of me, because in my previous pregnancy, a singular pregnancy, I was hospitalized three times with the diagnosis of hyperemesis gravidarum—an uncontrollable severe nausea and vomiting during pregnancy—and spent about a month in the hospital. This time, because it was a twin pregnancy, I was quite sure that the symptoms would be even more severe to the point where I was fearing for my life. In the doctor’s office, I said those very words, that I would die in this pregnancy, but the doctor laughed and said I would not die, and that she, the doctor, also had nausea during the pregnancy.


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