The late Terri Schiavo’s sister speaks out against ‘right-to-die’ movement
  By  Mary Ann Wyand
  
The “so-called right to die”  movement in contemporary society is dramatically affecting public opinion about  respect for the sanctity and dignity of life, Suzanne Vitadamo of St.  Petersburg, Fla., told more than 850 pro-life supporters attending the 23rd  annual Celebrate Life dinner on Sept. 27 at the Indiana Convention Center in  Indianapolis.
  Vitadamo is the younger sister of  the late Terri Schindler Schiavo, a 41-year-old brain-damaged woman who died on  March 31 of court-ordered dehydration requested by Michael Schiavo, her  husband.
  Terri Schiavo’s tragic story  generated international attention and prompted lobbying efforts by countless  pro-life supporters, including the late Pope John Paul II and Father Frank  Pavone of Staten Island, N.Y., the founder and director of Priests  for Life.
  “We as a society are standing on a  cliff with two clear and utterly polarized choices that we can make,” Vitadamo  said. “Either we value each other in spite of disability or we despise each  other based on those limitations.”
  During her keynote address at the  fundraising dinner sponsored by Right to Life of Indianapolis, Vitadamo  recounted her family’s legal struggle to gain custody of Terri Schiavo so they  could lovingly care for her for the rest of her life.
  “After more  than 12 years of struggles by my family to protect the life of … Terri  Schindler Schiavo, my perfectly healthy sister died on March 31 of this year  from the effects of dehydration,” Vitadamo said. “The Circuit Court of Pinellas  County, Florida, ordered that my sister die this unnatural and gruesome death  by commanding that a simple  gastric feeding tube be forcably taken away from  her without her consent, and that she be allowed to deteriorate to death.”
  Vitadamo said  her sister lived in a neurologically compromised state for reasons that are  still unknown.
  “Terri was  supported only by a feeding tube, nothing else,” she said. “Terri could breathe  on her own and had no machines ... hooked up to her. Other than my sister’s  brain damage, she was a physically healthy young woman.
  “My brother  and my parents and I wanted nothing more from anyone than to be granted  permission to care for her for the span of her natural life,” she said. “Terri  tenaciously fought for her life for more than 13 days after being deprived of  the most basic natural and constant need that you and I all share—the need for  nourishment, for food and water. She was deprived of those basic things for one  reason only—to cause unnatural and untimely death.”
  
Vitadamo said  her sister was not terminally ill and was not dying until her food and water  were taken away in March.
  “She was not  succumbing to any killer disease,” Vitadamo said. “She was disabled. She was  dependent on others, but she was still very much alive—a woman and a person—in  our eyes. I was forced to watch my older sister suffer through the very real  and very grisly effects of terminal dehydration.”
  With each  passing day, she said, her sister appeared weaker, thinner and more frightened.
  “I watched as  my family begged for her life,” Vitadamo said, “and watched as health care  professionals turned a deaf ear to her suffering. I listened to well-known  proponents to this so-called right to die coax news audiences into the belief  that what my sister endured was a gentle, peaceful and euphoric demise. I sat  on the corner of her bed and held her thinning hands, trying so hard to  understand that what I was witnessing was actually real.”
  When her  sister died, Vitadamo said, “she took a very tangible piece of me with her.”
  Michael  Schiavo and Terri Schindler were married in 1984, she said. “On Feb. 25, 1990,  Terri collapsed due to mysterious circumstances, causing her brain to go  without oxygen, which led to her profound brain damage.
  “My family  actually began our battle to save Terri in 1993,” she said. “Since 1997, when  we first learned that Michael Schiavo was going to try to remove Terri’s  feeding tube, my family did everything we could to stop him from using his  power as Terri’s guardian to have her starved and dehydrated to death.”
  Throughout  this legal battle, Vitadamo said, “the media played a major role in Terri’s  situation. Pretty much since the beginning, the media … distorted the facts,  omitted key details, failed to verify statements by Michael Schiavo and his  attorney, and consistently wrote that this was a right-to-die case and that  Michael Schiavo was acting in the best interests of Terri, something that is  absolutely untrue.
  “… Most  alarming is how the media continues to use their influence to persuade the  apathetic public that involuntary euthanasia should be permitted,” she said,  “dangerously advancing the viewpoint of this pro-death movement that has taken  hold of our country.”
  The Schindler  family recently started a pro-life foundation in Terri Schiavo’s memory to  educate people and lobby against euthanasia. In September, they announced plans  to write a book about her life and the truth about her death.
  St. Luke  parishioner Joan Byrum of Indianapolis, the president of Right to Life of  Indianapolis, said after the dinner that she was “really overwhelmed [by  listening to] how it would be to have your loved one die like that before your  eyes and be able to do nothing.” †