by
Steven Ertelt
LifeNews.com Editor
March 31,
2009
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St.
Petersburg, FL (LifeNews.com) -- Four years ago today, Terri Schiavo
succumbed to the effects of the painful starvation and dehydration
death her former husband subjected her to over a 13-day period. Terri
was killed on March 31, 2005 when her former husband won a protracted
legal battle against the Schindler family for the right to disconnect
her feeding tube.
Now, the Schindler family -- Terri's mother and father and brother and sister -- honors her memory by fighting for other disabled and minimally conscious patients to receive the kind of medical care, rehabilitative treatment and food and water Terri was denied.
"Four years ago today, by the order of Judge George W. Greer, Terri Schiavo died a slow barbaric death by starvation and dehydration over a period of almost two weeks," the Schindler family said in a statement to LifeNews.com.
"We must never forget what happened to Terri and the horrible way she was killed," they added.
"However, just as important is to remember that what happened to Terri is occurring every day in our nation," the Schindler family continued. "In this very moment countless people are suffering slow, agonizing deaths in hospice, nursing homes, and hospitals in America and around the world."
Bobby Schindler, Terri's brother, talked about the anniversary with OneNewsNow.
"It certainly is a sad day. March 31 will mark the fourth year of Terri's death by dehydration, and there's really not a day that doesn't go by where our family doesn't think of Terri," he notes.
"More
importantly now is that there are other lives that are in jeopardy
of being killed the way Terri's was," he adds. "Our family
fights every day for other families faced with similar circumstances.
This issue did not die with my sister."
Doctors who examined Terri say she was not in a persistent vegetative
state and that her condition could have been improved has she been
given access to more medical care and rehabilitative treatment.
After her death, Michael Schiavo and the Schindler family took different routes.
Schiavo
eventually founded a political action committee called TerriPAC to
attack pro-life lawmakers who aided her family in their fight to save
Terri's life. After violating FEC reporting requirements on numerous
occasions and slapped with fines from the agency, Michael closed the
group at the end of 2007.
The Schindler family started the Terri Schindler Schiavo Foundation
and has helped disabled patients and opposed assisted suicide and
euthanasia since Terri's death.
Recently, a new documentary about Terri's life that presents facts that the mainstream media distorted has been getting rave reviews.
Franklin Springs Family Media has put out a newly-released documentary called The Terri Schiavo Story that it says provides previously unexplored facts of the case through in-depth interviews with participants in the saga.
The documentary is hosted by author and speaker Joni Eareckson Tada, who became personally involved in the case in 2005 and is herself disabled because of a diving accident.
Related
web sites:
Terri Schindler Schiavo Foundation - http://www.terrisfight.org
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