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Monday, December 7th, 2009

Breastfeeding 1-2-3

National Nurse-In Planned

The media frenzy over the woman kicked off a plane for breastfeeding continues.

Mothering magazine has an exclusive web interview with the mother, Emily Gillette, who says in part:

I’d like to see the idea of breastfeeding introduced in a sentence without having to use words like “climate” or “issue.” I’d like people to stop taking it upon themselves to decide what age is appropriate and what age isn’t for women to continue breastfeeding. I’d like our society to stop comparing breastfeeding to sexual acts, defecation, genital exposure, and treating it like an attention seeking act. I’d like breastfeeding not to have to be a statement of defiance, but a message of love.

More details of the event are revealed:

It was 10:00 at night when, after a three-hour delay, Emily Gillette and her family gratefully boarded flight 6160 from Burlington, Vermont to New York’s La Guardia. Heading to the city to rendezvous with relatives from abroad, Emily took her window seat in the eighth row of a nine-row plane, next to her husband. She began to discreetly breastfeed her baby before takeoff, aware that nursing helps babies regulate air travel’s pressure changes. Within moments, she was asked by the sole flight attendant to cover up with a blanket. Citing her right to nurse, Gillette calmly and politely declined. The flight attendant then told Gillette, “You are offending me,” and proceeded to have a ticket agent board the aircraft to remove Emily and her family. The Gillettes quietly gathered their belongings and left, after unsuccessfully appealing to the pilot and co-pilot for help.

Delta ticket agents (including the agent that told the Gillettes they had to leave the airplane) then attempted to communicate with the crew to reverse the flight attendant’s decision, to no avail. The co-pilot came off the plane and spoke with the family, apologizing for their removal but claiming that there was nothing he could do to change a flight attendant’s decision made in the cabin of an aircraft.

Lactivists at the Mothering magazine message boards are scrambling to organize a national nurse-in at Delta counters around the country on Tuesday, November 21, 2006 at 10 a.m. For more details see this thread.

Having recently completed a pleasant flight with my 22-month-old nursling (see Traveling with a First Class Nursling), I’m shocked by how Emily Gillette and her 22-month-old were treated. If that happened to me I would be mortified and horribly upset. Does that mean I’m going to trot down to Delta on Tuesday? I don’t think so (although I would have gone to the original nurse-in in Burlington International Airport where the incident occurred). A rookie flight attendant made a terrible mistake. The incident has gotten a lot of attention, the airline has responded, and I’ve signed the petition. There are all kinds of lactivists. I advocate breastfeeding through information, support, and my own example as a mother who readily nurses in public, anywhere and at any time. I suppose if I knew there would be a large group of nursing mothers gathering at my local airport, I might attend, but for now I am content voicing my opinion through my computer.

Will you participate in the national nurse-in, and if so, at which airport?

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Comments

11 Responses to “National Nurse-In Planned”
  1. Kate says:

    That is the most ridiculous thing I have ever heard!

    Espcially with the new liquid restrictions, I have never been more relieved to be a nursing mother.

    And really, a mother’s right to nurse is nothing compared to a baby’s right to eat! I make 3 long-haul flights every year with my children. and for 3 out of the last 4 years, I have had a nursling with me. But, I have never flown with Delta and now, I never will.

    There is no comfort in this kind of ignorance.

    Strangely, I don’t find and comfort in the fact that the flight attendant has probably ended her career with this.

  2. angela says:

    Kate, the really sad thing is that the flight attendant was merely “disciplined” (no further explanation given). The only consolation is that I’m sure she’ll never harrass a nursing mother again.

Trackbacks

Check out what others are saying about this post...
  1. [...] You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your ownsite. [...]

  2. [...] So, I found this report via Breastfeeding 1-2-3 of a woman asked to leave a Delta flight for nursing, extremely shocking. The right to breastfeed on a plane has long been established. In fact, most airlines encourage it to protect the baby’s ears from cabin pressure. [...]

  3. [...] There’s a Yahoo group set up for mothers interested in participating in Tuesday’s national nurse-in. [...]

  4. [...] There are at least 20 airports confirmed for the national nurse-in tomorrow, and another 20 tentative sites (those which were recently added to the list and/or have one or two families committed and need more participants). Be sure to join the Yahoo Group for more information about your local airport if you plan to attend tomorrow (Tuesday, November 21, 2006) at Delta counters at 10 a.m. local time. If you want to share the story or pictures of your participation in a nurse-in, e-mail me! [...]

  5. [...] All in all the first-hand accounts of the national nurse-ins have been extremely positive. The participants were peaceful and the news reporters were friendly and sympathetic to the cause. Only one participant reported a bad experience when she was turned away from JFK airport. Security was not allowing anyone without a ticket to enter, but the report was unclear as to whether this restriction was due to the planned nurse-in or simply a holiday security measure. [...]

  6. [...] The dust has settled after the national nurse-in on Tuesday, November 21, 2006, and the final tally approaches 900 activists and children at 40 airports across the country! I’m impressed by the tremendous grassroots effort organized in just four days’ time! [...]

  7. [...] According to participants, when five mothers and nine children originally gathered at DFW for the national nurse-in on November 21, they were harassed by airport security and threatened with arrest for indecent exposure and disorderly conduct. Mothers participating in this second nurse-in not only will gather in support of the mother kicked off a Delta flight for nursing without covering up, but to insist that the airport police (Department of Public Safety officers) apologize for their inappropriate comments and threats. They want the officers to receive training in the Texas breastfeeding law and the statutes defining indecent exposure and disorderly conduct. As it turns out, the indecent exposure law in Section 21.08 of the Texas Penal Code does not apply to breasts (not that any mothers were exposing their breasts anyway) but rather a person’s genitals and anus. Furthermore, the mothers were incorrectly told they had to leave because they did not have a permit to protest. When the mothers sought to apply for a permit for this Friday’s nurse-in, airport administration informed them that in fact a permit is not required for a peaceful gathering inside the airport, but only for picketers carrying large signs outside in front of the airport. As long as the mothers at Friday’s nurse-in do not carry picket signs or block people from coming or going, they are within their rights to gather inside the terminal. [...]

  8. [...] You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your ownsite. [...]



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