Julie Z. Lee
In April, a high school student, who had been hiding her pregnancy, delivered her baby in a bathtub, cut her own umbilical cord, and then proceeded to wrap her baby in a plastic bag. The infant was later found dead under her bed.
Each year, an alarming number of young women hide their pregnancies, then abandon their newborn babies on doorsteps, in dumpsters or worse." While many infants survive, others have encountered devastating fates. The situation is especially tragic considering there is a law in place to protect those unwanted babies. Since 2001, the safe surrender law (also called Safe Haven or Safely Surrendered Baby) allows parents to anonymously give a newborn to a hospital, police or fire station within 72 hours of the babys birth without criminal implications.
The problem is that the majority of young people dont know the law exists.
A lot of education has gone to health-care workers and adult audiences, says Jaynie Boren, vice president for strategic planning and business development at San Antonio Community Hospital. Whats been missing is information geared toward junior high, high school and college audiences.
But all that is about to change. This past summer, Brian Bazemore and Jackson Boren, senior film and television majors at Pacific Union College, were looking for an internship. Serving as coffee runners on a set looked like the only option, but then a phone call from San Antonio Community Hospital in Upland, Calif., changed their luck. The hospital asked Bazemore and Boren to film, direct and edit a public service film on safe surrender for teenagers.
I remember thinking I had heard of safe surrender, but I didnt really know much about it, says Bazemore. Regardless, Boren and Bazemore took up the challenge and dived into an intensive education session. They met with physicians and nurses at the hospital, law enforcement officials, defense lawyers and public health educators. As they soaked up the information, the two began to comprehend the gravity of their roles.
It was a big responsibility to present the law in an accurate light and make sure you dont blur the message
because this is something that can save lives, says Boren.
The students decided to feature interviews with young women discussing child abandonment and the safe surrender law to provide perspective from a teenagers point of view. Im just so glad that Brian and Jackson came up with this awesome idea, says Rhonda Matthews, a registered nurse at San Antonio who worked with the project. They wanted to show what young girls have to say so that they can relate to the girls who are watching. I think that is the most powerful thing.
Seven weeks later, the students handed in a finished product focusing on the message of no shame, no blame, no names. On Oct. 11, San Antonio premiered the film to more than 200 health educators, public officials and law enforcement officers. Among the special guests were California Senator Bob Dutton, who drove the bill to extend the Safe Haven Law permanently (it would have expired earlier this year), and Debi Faris-Cifelli, founder of Garden of Angels, a non-profit organization for the prevention of infant abandonment.
The response has been one of overwhelming support its boggling my mind, says Jaynie Boren. Already, their initial order of 500 copies is almost gone and reprints are on the way. The hospital hopes to work with Dutton on distribution to schools and perhaps make it a part of the statewide curriculum.
This is Bazemore and Boren's second partnership in a film production. Last year, the two, who have been friends since fourth grade, worked on a documentary called "Everyday People," which focused on the college experience at PUC. The piece received a special jury prize at the 2006 SonScreen Film Festival. "Safe Surrender," their second collaborative project, is also garnering good reviews and plenty of local press. But for the two aspiring filmmakers, their personal success is secondary to a cause that only two months ago they knew little about.
I was just telling Brian a week back, if our names werent attached to this film, I would be just as happy, says Boren. Its not about us. Its about the young girls and getting the option out there. Just knowing it can save lives is good enough for me.