Chava Rosenfarb and Heniek (Henry) Morgentaler, her future husband, Brussels, circa 1947.
Gallery of Henry Morgentaler
1950
Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Yiddish author Melech Ravitch Chava Rosenfarb, unknown man, Ravitsh's wife, Rokhl, and Henry Morgentaler. Montreal 1950's.
Career
Gallery of Henry Morgentaler
1981
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Dr. Henry Morgentaler leaves court with a friend yesterday after Harvard professor Phillip Stubblefield testified that clinic abortions are safer than those done at hospitals. Photo by Michael Stuparyk.
Gallery of Henry Morgentaler
1983
361 University Ave, Toronto, ON M5G 1T3, Canada
Dr. Henry Morgentaler basked in his victory and ignored protesters yesterday outside the University Ave. courthouse after a judge upheld his release on bail. Photo by Michael Stuparyk.
Gallery of Henry Morgentaler
1983
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Henry Morgentaler tells reporters in Toronto that he plans to resume abortions at his downtown clinic soon. Pro-abortion lobbyist Judy Rebick is on Morgentaler's right. Photo by David Cooper
Gallery of Henry Morgentaler
1983
361 University Ave, Toronto, ON M5G 1T3, Canada
Dr. Henry Morgentaler; on trial for conspiracy to procure a miscarriage at a Harbord Street clinic seen entering the University Avenue courthouse. The court was told yesterday Morgentaler commented to police that Canada's abortion law is stupid and he had nothing to hide. Photo by Ron Bull.
Gallery of Henry Morgentaler
1983
361 University Ave, Toronto, ON M5G 1T3, Canada
Out of court: Dr. Henry Morgentaler and Dr. Robert Scott leave the Supreme Court of Ontario where charges against Scot and Dr. Leslie Smoling were dropped. Photo by John Mahler.
Gallery of Henry Morgentaler
1983
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Victory sign: Dr. Henry Morgentaler holds up his fingers in a V for victory sign as he prepared to climb into a police paddy wagon to be taken from old city hall to the Toronto (Don) Jail; where he spent the night. Behind him; co-accused Dr. Leslie Frank Smoling climbs into the vehicle; preceded by Dr. Robert Scott. About 40 supporters demonstrated outside the jail. Photo by Dick Darrell.
Gallery of Henry Morgentaler
1984
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Henry Morgentaler Toronto Trial and Appeal Photo by Jeff Goode.
Gallery of Henry Morgentaler
1984
78 Queens Park, Toronto, ON M5S 2C5, Canada
Anti-abortion crusader Joe Borowski (right) squared off with controversial abortion advocate Dr. Henry Morgentaler before 200 University of Toronto law students. Photo by Jeff Goode.
Gallery of Henry Morgentaler
1984
361 University Ave, Toronto, ON M5G 1T3, Canada
Lunch break: Dr. Henry Morgentaler; left; and Dr. Robert Scott; two of three doctors charged with conspiracy to procure a miscarriage; leave the University Avenue courthouse yesterday as their trial adjourned for lunch. The jury will start deliberations today after hearing more points from the judge. Photo by Tony Bock.
Gallery of Henry Morgentaler
1985
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Dr. Henry Morgentaler at press-conference in Toronto.
Gallery of Henry Morgentaler
1986
Harbord Street, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Pause for celebration: Dr. Henry Morgentaler and supporters share a champagne toast yesterday at his Harbord Street abortion clinic to mark its second anniversary. The doctor said his opponents have a right to their beliefs, but they shouldn't impose them on anybody else. Photo by Ron Bull
Gallery of Henry Morgentaler
1988
Harbord Street, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Dr. Henry Morgentaler shares a light moment yesterday with Jane; a nurse at his Harbord Street clinic. About 1;000 protesters and 500 supporters were expected outside the clinic in the wake of the Supreme Court ruling on the clinic's legality. Photo by Erin Combs.
Gallery of Henry Morgentaler
1988
Harbord Street, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Dr. Henry Morgentaler raises his arm in victory after the Supreme Court of Canada's ruling. Photo by David Cooper.
Gallery of Henry Morgentaler
1988
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Henry Morgentaler demonstrates a manual vacuum aspirator. Photo by David Cooper.
Gallery of Henry Morgentaler
1989
Harbord Street, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Dr. Henry Morgentaler stands outside his Harbord Street abortion clinic yesterday after vandals spray-painted the words Baby kill across the front of the building. Morgentaler said vandalism and pro-life demonstrations; which plagued the clinic for years; have virtually stopped since he won a court injunction in 1989. Photo by Mike Slaughter.
Gallery of Henry Morgentaler
2008
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Dr. Henry Morgentaler after a press conference this morning at his Toronto abortion clinic, after it was announced he will receive the Order of Canada. Photo by Tony Bock.
Achievements
Membership
Humanist Association of Canada
Henry Morgentaler was a member and the first President of the Humanist Association of Canada.
Dr. Henry Morgentaler leaves court with a friend yesterday after Harvard professor Phillip Stubblefield testified that clinic abortions are safer than those done at hospitals. Photo by Michael Stuparyk.
Dr. Henry Morgentaler basked in his victory and ignored protesters yesterday outside the University Ave. courthouse after a judge upheld his release on bail. Photo by Michael Stuparyk.
Henry Morgentaler tells reporters in Toronto that he plans to resume abortions at his downtown clinic soon. Pro-abortion lobbyist Judy Rebick is on Morgentaler's right. Photo by David Cooper
Dr. Henry Morgentaler; on trial for conspiracy to procure a miscarriage at a Harbord Street clinic seen entering the University Avenue courthouse. The court was told yesterday Morgentaler commented to police that Canada's abortion law is stupid and he had nothing to hide. Photo by Ron Bull.
Out of court: Dr. Henry Morgentaler and Dr. Robert Scott leave the Supreme Court of Ontario where charges against Scot and Dr. Leslie Smoling were dropped. Photo by John Mahler.
Victory sign: Dr. Henry Morgentaler holds up his fingers in a V for victory sign as he prepared to climb into a police paddy wagon to be taken from old city hall to the Toronto (Don) Jail; where he spent the night. Behind him; co-accused Dr. Leslie Frank Smoling climbs into the vehicle; preceded by Dr. Robert Scott. About 40 supporters demonstrated outside the jail. Photo by Dick Darrell.
Anti-abortion crusader Joe Borowski (right) squared off with controversial abortion advocate Dr. Henry Morgentaler before 200 University of Toronto law students. Photo by Jeff Goode.
Lunch break: Dr. Henry Morgentaler; left; and Dr. Robert Scott; two of three doctors charged with conspiracy to procure a miscarriage; leave the University Avenue courthouse yesterday as their trial adjourned for lunch. The jury will start deliberations today after hearing more points from the judge. Photo by Tony Bock.
Pause for celebration: Dr. Henry Morgentaler and supporters share a champagne toast yesterday at his Harbord Street abortion clinic to mark its second anniversary. The doctor said his opponents have a right to their beliefs, but they shouldn't impose them on anybody else. Photo by Ron Bull
Dr. Henry Morgentaler shares a light moment yesterday with Jane; a nurse at his Harbord Street clinic. About 1;000 protesters and 500 supporters were expected outside the clinic in the wake of the Supreme Court ruling on the clinic's legality. Photo by Erin Combs.
Dr. Henry Morgentaler stands outside his Harbord Street abortion clinic yesterday after vandals spray-painted the words Baby kill across the front of the building. Morgentaler said vandalism and pro-life demonstrations; which plagued the clinic for years; have virtually stopped since he won a court injunction in 1989. Photo by Mike Slaughter.
Dr. Henry Morgentaler after a press conference this morning at his Toronto abortion clinic, after it was announced he will receive the Order of Canada. Photo by Tony Bock.
Henry Morgentaler was a Polish-born Canadian physician and abortion advocate. He spent much of his life advocating for women’s reproductive rights at a time when they could not legally obtain abortions.
Background
Henry Morgentaler was born Henekh Morgentaler on March 19, 1923, in Łódź, Poland to the family of Josef Morgentaler and Golda Nitka, well-known members of the Jewish Socialist Labor Bund. He was the middle child of three in a Jewish household. His mother worked as a seamstress, and his father worked as a textile worker and union organizer. He had an older sister Ghitel Morgentaler and a younger brother Mumek Morgentaler. In September 1939, when Morgentaler was sixteen years old, Adolf Hitler led Germany to invade Poland, with assistance from Joseph Stalin in the Soviet Union. By October 1939, Hitler's forces occupied Poland. The Gestapo, the German secret police, established a ghetto to confine the Jewish residents, including Morgentaler and his family, in Łódź. Shortly after, the Gestapo executed Josef for attempting to escape, and the Gestapo sentenced Ghitel to the Treblinka concentration camp outside of Treblinka, Poland, where she was later killed. In August 1944, the remaining three members of the Morgentaler family were sent to the Auschwitz concentration camp in Oświęcim, Poland. At Auschwitz, Golda died and her two surviving sons were sent to the Dachau concentration camp in Dachau, Germany, where they remained until the Allied liberation at the end of World War II in 1945.
Education
After freedom from the concentration camps in 1946, Morgentaler enrolled at Marburg-Lahn University in Marburg, Germany as a medical student. In 1947, Morgentaler transferred to Brussels, Belgium, to continue his medical studies. In 1949, Morgentaler married Chava Rosenfarb, a fellow concentration camp survivor, and completed his medical degree. To obtain work as a physician, Morgentaler and his wife immigrated to Montreal, Quèbec, in 1950. There he began additional medical studies at the Universitè de Montrèal in Montreal, Quèbec. A few months after beginning his studies, his wife gave birth to the first child Goldie and Morgentaler completed his medical studies in 1953.
Even though Morgentaler had completed his medical degree, Canadian law forbade him from practicing medicine until he became a citizen. In 1955, Morgentaler became a Canadian citizen, which allowed him to work as a physician in the country. Soon after, Morgentaler opened his first private practice as a general practitioner in East Montreal, Quèbec. Morgentaler began to focus on family planning in his medical practice, and supplied couples with birth control pills. He also performed surgical procedures on men, such as vasectomies, which aim to produce sterility.
Throughout the early years of his private practice, women approached Morgentaler to perform abortions, but he refused and abided by the law. The first Canadian criminal code of 1892 had instituted a complete ban on abortion that was still upheld in the 1960s. In 1967, Morgentaler presented a brief before the House of Commons' Health and Welfare Committee, a component of the Canadian Parliament. In the brief, Morgentaler argued that women should have the ability to safely terminate unplanned pregnancies. After that presentation, many women came to his clinic demanding information with regard to abortions. However, Canadian legislation still restricted abortions.
Morgentaler began to perform abortions covertly, without any approval of the three-person committees and established his own abortion clinic in 1969 in Montreal. At his clinic, Morgentaler charged his patients a meager fee to ensure that the women did not endanger themselves and seek other more affordable illicit abortions. On 1 June 1970, the police raided the clinic and arrested Morgentaler and his staff for charges of performing illegal abortions. Immediately after his arrest, he posted bail and continued performing abortions at his clinic, and continued to promote his clinic publicly. A court later determined that there was an improper use of a search warrant and dismissed Morgentaler of the charges. By 1973, Morgentaler reported that he completed approximately 5,000 successful abortions. On 15 August 1973, the police returned to his clinic and arrested him once more for multiple counts of illegal abortions.
In October 1973, Morgentaler's first trial commenced, and his defense team contended that Morgentaler observed his duty to protect the lives of his patients, and this duty, according to his legal team, carried more significance than the law restricting abortion. On 13 Nov 1973, the jury concurred with the defense team and acquitted Morgentaler of all charges. Yet, on 26 April 1974, the Quèbec Court of Appeal overturned the acquittal and ordered Morgentaler to serve eighteen months in prison starting in March of 1975. That ruling generated a tremendous amount of controversy and outrage in Canada. While serving his sentence, Morgentaler experienced more charges of illegal abortions, although the jury acquitted him once more. During his imprisonment, he experienced a mild heart attack, after which he transferred into a different hospital. Shortly after that incident, the Canadian Parliament introduced an amendment, commonly referred to as the Morgentaler Amendment, which disallowed appeal courts to reverse acquittal decisions from juries. Due to this ratification, Morgentaler was released from confinement eight months early, but the police charged the physician once more for performing illegal abortions in January 1976. Once more, the jury acquitted him of all charges. Shortly after this third acquittal, the Parti Quebecois, a separatist, political party, was elected to office. The rise of this political party reflecting the rapid social, political, and cultural change, referred to as the Quiet Revolution, in a province that had previously been very socially conservative and largely influenced by the Catholic Church. Soon after, all pursuit of legal action against Morgentaler in the province ceased.
In 1983, Morgentaler, with the assistance of physicians Leslie Smoling and Robert Scott, established abortion clinics in Toronto, Ontario, and Winnipeg, Manitoba. From 1983 to 1985, the police raided the Winnipeg clinic three times, but, much like his experience in Montreal, Morgentaler was never convicted. Meanwhile, in 1983, the Ontario police raided the Toronto clinic, just months after protesters attempted to firebomb it, which led to criminal charges against Morgentaler, Smoling, and Scott. The three appealed the charges, citing the same arguments presented in the Quèbec court, which led to their acquittal. But, the Ontario Court of Appeal, in 1985, reversed the decision and ordered a re-trial. The three doctors challenged the constitutionality of that decision in the Supreme Court of Canada.
During his career, Morgentaler faced animosity from anti-abortion advocates. For instance, in the 1980s, he received death threats through mail. In 1983, angry protesters firebombed his Toronto clinic, although this resulted in only minimal damage. Assailants once again firebombed the same Toronto clinic in 1992. In spite of these attacks, he continued operating numerous abortion clinics across Canada. Morgentaler retired in 2006.
As a result of Henry Morgentaler's campaign (and the work of organizations such as the Canadian Abortion Rights Action League, CARAL), the Supreme Court struck down federal abortion law as unconstitutional in 1988, thereby decriminalizing the procedure. Morgentaler was also the first to use the vacuum aspiration method in Canada, a safer procedure for women than previous methods. For his achievements, he received several accolades such as an honorary Doctor of Law degree from the University of Western Ontario in London, Ontario, and a 2008 induction into the Order of Canada, Canada's second-highest honor of merit.
Morgentaler was an Atheist. In 1991, he debated William Lane Craig in a debate "Humanism vs Christianity."
Politics
In 1972, Morgentaler ran in the Federal Election in the riding of Saint-Denis as an independent, finishing fourth with 1,509 votes.
Views
In 1967 Canada's justice minister Pierre Trudeau introduced the Criminal Law Amendment Act, which partially decriminalized abortions under extenuating circumstances, and the Parliament ratified the bill in 1969 by which time Trudeau became prime minister of Canada. The law stated that only public hospital physicians could perform abortions under the stipulation that a three-physician panel determined that the women's life was in peril if she gave birth. Morgentaler said that the law did not grant sufficient rights to women because the committees seldom met and most hospitals still refused to provide abortions.
After the Quiet Revolution, Morgentaler decided to publicly advocate for his pro-choice position on abortion in other Canadian provinces. In 1976, Morgentaler presented a legal challenge to repeal abortion restrictions in all of Canada in the case, Morgentaler v. The Queen, but he lost that appeal in a six to three decision. Not deterred by the lost court case of 1976, Morgentaler continued his pursuit of expanding abortion rights outside of Quèbec.
In 1982, the Canadian government issued the Charter of Rights and Freedoms which granted extensive individual rights to every Canadian citizen and dictated that any current law which violated those granted rights must be repealed. For R v. Morgentaler (1988), Morgentaler focused on section seven of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms, which outlined that everyone has the right to life, liberty, and security to a person. With regards to the current abortion legislation, Morgentaler contended that the three-person committees infringed upon women's security to person as it violates their right to bodily integrity and autonomy. Furthermore, he pointed out that the committees caused extraneous time delays in the abortion process. He also pointed out the biased nature of these committees, which frequently included only men. The Supreme Court accepted his arguments and, on 28 January 1988, decriminalized abortion in Canada in a five to two vote. This court decision left the matter of abortion to be regulated on a provincial basis.
After the 1988 ruling, Morgentaler continued to contend with anti-abortion policies in Canada. Some provincial governments still wanted to propose anti-abortion legislation despite that the federal government had decriminalized abortion in Canada. For instance, Nova Scotia, in 1989, issued a law that disallowed any abortions occurring in a setting not formally designated as a hospital according to the province's selective criteria. In response, Morgentaler opened up a clinic in Nova Scotia in 1989, which subsequently led to his arrest on fourteen charges. However, the Nova Scotia judge acquitted him, but the province appealed the case to the Supreme Court of Canada. In R v. Morgentaler (1993), the court unanimously ruled in Morgentaler's favor that Nova Scotia had no right to legislate criminal law. In 1995, New Brunswick attempted a similar ban that forbade abortions outside hospitals, but the legislation met its demise in court as well.
Membership
Henry Morgentaler was a member and the first President of the Humanist Association of Canada.
Humanist Association of Canada
,
Canada
Personality
Morgentaler was fun, a bon vivant, generous. Everyone called him Henry, never Dr. Morgentaler. He wanted it that way. He was, by his own admission, a proud womanizer.
Physical Characteristics:
As he aged, Morgentaler's health deteriorated and he retired from practice in 2006 due to an emergency heart surgery. On 29 May 2013, Morgentaler died in his Toronto home from a heart attack.
Connections
In 1949, Morgentaler married Chava Rosenfarb, a fellow concentration camp survivor. they had two children: Goldie and Abraham. In 1979, his marriage to Rosenfarb came to an end when the couple filed for divorce due to Morgentaler's self-admitted adultery. In 1979, Morgentaler married Carmen Wernli who shortly after gave birth to their son Yann on 2 June 1980. They divorced in 1983. On 9 February 1998, Morgentaler married his long-time girlfriend Arlene Leibovitch with whom he had a son, Benny, who was born on 9 Jan 1988.