seed grants

Grant Partner Spotlight on Holistic Abortions: Imagining Localized, Decolonized Community Health Care & Abortion Care

This summer, ACP Board Member Abby Minor had the pleasure of talking with current Grant Partner Daena Horner of Holistic Abortions, a grassroots project focused on shifting the ways abortions are seen and supported in North America. Engaging in popular education, narrative shift work, and training resources that prioritize accessibility, inclusion and autonomy, Holistic Abortions is promoting decolonized models of community care that honor the lived experiences and traditions of the people having abortions. 

ACP’s 2024 Grant Partnership with Holistic Abortions supports the group’s newest zine, The Scoop on Herbal Abortion. Check out all the Holistic Abortions zines here!

AM: Hi Daena, I’m so glad to have a chance to hear about your work with Holistic Abortions. Let’s start at the beginning: What kinds of experiences informed your decision to create the Holistic Abortions project? How did you arrive where you are now?

DH: Hi Abby; thanks so much for this question. It’s funny to think of all the twists and turns and what seemed like roadblocks, but were actually important detours, that result in us landing in a good place with good people to build a community with. Holistic was a little sprout pushing through the soil after spending the time underground developing and nourishing seeds planted and nourished by the countless others practicing and protecting home abortions and holistic care. It came about as an organic and inevitable culmination of collaboration and wild imagination between friends and colleagues who wanted to challenge the dominant narrative about how people talked about, presented and experienced abortion. 

I, like so many people, rely on a plurality of medical modalities for my health and wellbeing. If I get sick I may drink some ginger tea with honey, eat some caldo or chicken noodle soup, and maybe take a decongestant or analgesic. I’ll avoid caffeine and sleep as much as possible. It’s a combination of allopathic medicines, herbal remedies and healing recipes handed down from our grandmothers. For most of history abortion existed in a multiplicity of practices resulting in a type of care that acknowledged and addressed the spectrum of experiences and effects on the entire body (physical, emotional, and spiritual). 

My own clinical abortion was not those things. It was a medical procedure and little more. The pain of this procedure garnered nothing more than a “Aren’t you glad you’re not pregnant though?” and a silent recovery room where after not being allowed food all day (it was now after 4 pm) a second bag of goldfish was reluctantly shared. The entire experience felt like a passive aggressive exercise of power over me for making a mistake, or maybe it was a type of mutated punishment of centuries past where the female body is not to be sexual outside of reproduction. Either way, as someone who had always been pro-abortion, and had fundraised for local funds for years, the clinical abortion was a disillusioning experience. I had expected it to be different. I wanted it to be different. I believed it could be different. So, I started connecting with others who believed the same and were working towards making those changes.

Reading your words, I’m struck by the fact that our own experiences are so often what radicalize us. I had a very similar, disillusioning clinical abortion experience; and like you, I found myself thinking–this could be so much different, so much better. People should never have to settle for just ‘getting through’ any reproductive experience. That’s what led me to get involved with ACP. I know this is kind of a big question, but–now that you’ve been doing this work for some time, how would you like to see the abortion care landscape change?

Let’s dream and imagine together. Let’s pretend that the politics and judges don’t make the rules for a privatized health care system. Let’s imagine free abortion care on demand. I want to see more safe and effective methods and modalities available for people to choose from. I want to see people able to make consensual, informed decisions about their reproductive lives. People deserve to experience stigma and judgment free spaces and consultation when accessing the care they need to build the families they want. What can a localized, decolonized community health care look like and how can that be applied to abortion care?  What would a fully loving and supported abortion feel like in those unique communities? These are the imaginations that inspire and motivate the mission of Holistic Abortions.

You have so much powerful work going on at Holistic Abortions. Can you talk a bit about how your zine projects have come together? These are beautiful, colorful zines with titles like Grow Your Abortion: Herbs to Make you Bleed, and Creating Rituals for Pregnancy Loss. What’s that creative process like?

Thank you for lifting up our zines! The folks in zine culture are so talented and creative. It is such an honor to be able to share information in this way with people. The creative process for each zine looks a little different. Mostly they arrive as a response from the feedback and questions we get in workshops, classes, and conferences. Together the zines make up a colorful and creative answer section to our most Frequently Asked Questions. We were talking so much about “building relationships” with plants, especially the ones people might be working with to help us bleed, and eventually someone asked, “Okay, but how do you build a relationship with plants?”  And that was the beginning of the Grow Your Abortion zine.  It is not a ‘how to’ for herbal abortions, it is an invitation to interact and grow these plants as a way to understand them and their medicines. 

Creating Rituals for Pregnancy Loss also was put together as an answer to people asking how to honor their abortion in a way that isn’t appropriating the cultures and practices of others, since for many people these ceremonies didn’t survive the pressures of colonial assimilation and patriarchy. 

The newest zine, The Scoop on Herbal Abortion, attempts to address the most common misinformation and fallacies perpetuated about herbal abortion. As interest about using herbs in this way has increased, especially in more mainstream medical and research communities, we felt it was really important to start with a shared understanding about some of the biggest misconceptions. With the help of the ACP seed grant we were able to collaborate with some super skilled artists and provide a number of digital and print copies for others to help distribute and help us to reframe this sacred practice and center the voices, experience and expertise of the people who know, use, and respect this medicine.

The front cover of the zine “The Scoop” is centralized. It is against a multicolor, abstract background. The cover shows a large image of a drawn ice-cream cone in the foreground, with sprinkles in the background. The words “The Scoop” are typed over the ice-cream. The zine was created by Grantee, Holistic Abortions.

All of us at ACP are honored to support this latest zine project! Thank you for bringing it into the world. What’s next for you, now? What other projects are you dreaming towards?

Oh, well the work is without end isn’t it? When folks aim for the social justice and autonomy that can only come with liberation, legal abortion access for all is not nearly enough. Our cultural and narrative shifting work is a challenge to the simplified black and white stories of pro or anti that have permeated the mainstream conversation. The Holistic team commits to continuing the hard conversations with doctors, researchers, and organizations that can (hopefully) create the space and trust for long overdue growth spurts from those who traditionally hold power. We will continue to develop educational projects and foster relationships that allow for deep collaboration and healing between strategies and networks working toward radical change. We will do that while dedicating our educational resources and programs to expanding personal and collective knowledge of our bodies, of our health, and of our reproductive lives in ways that empower, inform and liberate us from the whims of the political system and the languor of those with power. 

Daena Horner, (she/they) is an educator, activist, abortion doula, and herbalist. They are co-founder and director of Holistic Abortions, a grassroots project committed to increasing body literacy and liberation through creating accessible curriculums, peer-to-peer support networks, community-led research and educational materials that center the people getting abortions.

Abby Minor lives in the ridges and valleys of central Pennsylvania, where she works on poems, essays, drawings, and projects exploring reproductive politics. Granddaughter of Appalachian tinkerers and Yiddish-speaking New Yorkers, she teaches poetry in her region’s low-income nursing homes and directs an arts education organization called Ridgelines Language Arts. 

Activists All Over the World Challenge Abortion Stigma

The Abortion Conversation Projects (ACP) has chosen nine new projects that are confronting stigma surrounding abortion even as access to abortion is threatened or outlawed. ” We received over 80 proposals, half of them from Africa, all using conversation as strategy to open minds and challenge people’s prejudice about abortion,” says Jeannie Ludlow, Chair of ACP.  The organization has now funded 91 Projects and offers support and expertise to both Grant Partners and applicants. 

“Ending Abortion Stigma” is a project in Haiti that will do a major outreach and education effort on abortion and reproductive health during International Safe Abortion Week in September and throughout the year. Abortion is illegal in Haiti and currently gang related violence has disrupted life there. 

ACP funded two projects from the Middle East/North Africa region (MENA) where abortion is largely illegal and there is very little public knowledge and information about abortion methods, policy and laws. Oppression of minority groups, ongoing violence, and political persecution complicate the problems for those brave enough to organize around abortion access and stigma.  “The Book of Abortion” is a project in Kurdistan that assembles vital information in one place for policy makers, academics, activists, and the public at large. “How to Terminate My Pregnancy” will make information about abortion access available in French, Arabic, and English to all MENA countries. 

Another Seed Grant was awarded to Clear Vision for Change in the DR Congo to do outreach and education in rural areas of the country. They are also working on a Safe App so that women can download information on abortion laws, access, and self care. 

In the U.S. two projects were chosen: AVOW-Texas for their outstanding “Let’s Talk About Abortion” efforts and “A is for …." a cultural organization that will produce a comic book about the need to travel to obtain an abortion since Roe v. Wade was overturned. The collection of comics will be edited by New Yorker Magazine artist Emily Flake.                     

Several existing Grant Partners received further funding. The North Dakota WIN Fund Book Club will expand their club and continue to read books about abortion and discussing abortion stigma and will help ACP in promoting abortion book clubs.  “Colours of My Dignity,” a Kenyan project uses trained “influencers” on What’s App to educate followers about the facts of abortion and to counteract the prevalent stigma about abortion.  Another Kenyan project, “Haven of Dreams” conducts highly effective Values Clarification training in the community, and they will also be re-funded. 

The Abortion Conversation Projects is committed to eliminating the stigma of abortion by supporting individuals and small groups engaged in innovative community-based projects that create new ways and opportunities to talk about abortion honestly and publicly. It has now awarded 91 Grant Partnerships since the program started in 2012. ACP fundraises each year to pay for seed grants and expenses. The all-volunteer ACP Board also offers consultations with people working on abortion stigma. ACP also expects to sponsor “Conversations” in the Autumn with stigma busters to support activists and exchange ways of discussing abortion stigma. To stay informed with ACP, email abortionconversation@gmail.com.

STIGMA BUSTING IS GLOBAL



Now that the U.S. Supreme Court has overturned Roe v. Wade, what does that mean for Abortion Conversation Projects and our partners? While all of us at ACP deeply grieve the Court’s decision, we also understand it as one severe manifestation of abortion stigma in a larger landscape of extreme stigma—a landscape that is variable in its geopolitical contours and global in scale. 


The overturning of Roe undoubtedly makes our work harder. But it also stands as an invitation to all of us in the U.S. who find ourselves in worsening legal terrain.

It is an invitation for us to look to other places and countries for tactics and inspiration where activists and everyday people have been, for many decades, reducing stigma and providing care in contexts where abortion is illegal or severely restricted. It is an invitation to greater unity, resourcefulness, and risk-taking. There is much to learn.


In the spirit of global solidarity, we’re honored to share excerpts from our recent round of grant applications—82 applications in all, from all over the world, the majority of whom are working to reduce stigma in contexts where abortion stigma is pervasive, harsh, and dangerous. While we don’t have the resources to partner with all of these applicants, every single one has reminded us of the incredible courage and creativity that are possible in even the most difficult contexts. Their ideas have poured in from Poland and Texas, Kenya and Iraq, Haiti and Puerto Rico, New York City and Ethiopia, Kurdistan and Tennessee. They show us gaps and fissures in current work. They show us new ways of taking action. These are some of their voices:


“[Our project] will mobilize community singers and composers, social workers, health and community organizers. These groups will help in designing educational songs which will address unsafe abortion [...] through traditional dances. The singers will be local singers, who will then be equipped with the information about safe abortion and where to get it.”

We decided to take responsibility for this issue [...]

because no other group or organization dared to speak out before.

“Since abortion in [our region] is illegal, and forbidden by religion, no institution takes charge of spreading awareness and opening platforms for a discussion on this sensitive and important topic. We decided to take responsibility for this issue and provide a theoretical ground for a discussion amongst the youth, institutions, the education and health sectors in order to achieve change in our culture [...] because no other group or organization dared to speak out before.” 


"After my experience of abortion as a queer and non-binary person, I felt isolated and didn't see my experience reflected in broader conversations about abortion. I desperately wanted to connect with other LGBTQ+ people who had had abortions so that I could know that I was not the only one. However, despite a lot of digging, I couldn't find an LGBTQ-centered support group focused on abortion to connect with." 

Anti-abortion extremists […] have been able to stigmatize abortion

so deeply that even supporters often feel

awkward or ashamed when talking about it.


“Anti-abortion extremists use the word ‘abortion’ 4 times more than pro-choice advocates do, which means that they have been able to stigmatize abortion so deeply that even supporters often feel awkward or ashamed when talking about it. Messaging matters because it can help move people from judgment to empathy. At the core, the goal of [this project] is to bridge that gap and empower our supporters to feel comfortable talking about abortion and then bring these conversations to their own communities.” 



There is no place available [in our province] for young girls of reproductive age and women to discuss safe abortion practices and therefore large number of girls and women becomes victim of forced pregnancies. [...] This project will initiate storytelling sessions with young girls of reproductive age and women and will foster dialogue through storytelling on the topic of safe abortion practices, challenges faced in accessing safe abortion, and recommendations for strengthening services for safe abortion in [our province.]" 

We use gender neutral language and acknowledge the ways colonialism, misogyny and racism have shaped how we view our body, cultural wisdoms, and herbal abortion. We want to smash the stigma, deepen the conversation, and bring accurate, safe and appropriate information to people seeking to integrate herbs into their abortion experience.” 



“[Our organization] is establishing the first formal national abortion storytelling program for people who had abortions in the United States during the pre-Roe years through 1980. [...] At a time when anti-abortion politicians are in positions of power to roll back rights and access, it is crucial that elders speak up loudly and move in alignment with current demands for abortion justice. [...] In doing so, we affirm the complexity and autonomy of younger generations and our younger selves.” 


“[Our] project is intended to make school and community environments safe for the girl-child to prosper intellectually and utilize her potential to the maximum without any hindrances and intimidation.”


Despite the negative outcomes of unsafe abortion on health and well-being of women and girls in [our region] devastated by decades of civil wars, where rape and violence against women are used as a weapon of war, the majority of women choose to end their pregnancies in secrecy which endangers their lives.

Despite the negative outcomes of unsafe abortion on health and well-being of women and girls in [our region] devastated by decades of civil wars, where rape and violence against women are used as a weapon of war, the majority of women choose to end their pregnancies in secrecy which endangers their lives. Despite these situations, abortion remains a taboo [...] When it is discussed, it is often from a moral, rather than a human rights perspective." 

“[Our] society is very patriarchal and conservative when it comes to the rights of women and girls. We were inspired by the struggles of feminists in Argentina to propose this project and begin our advocacy for access to abortion [...] we are proposing a week of activities in conjunction with International Abortion Access Day.” 

Breaking the silence around abortion is

important and can save lives.

“Through outreach to women and girls, teachers, religious leaders, and community members, the project will deliver key messages: Breaking the silence around abortion is important and can save lives.” 

“Stigma prevents women from accessing abortion services [in our country] even when they are legally allowed to. [...] This same stigma associated to abortion also dissuades nurses and other clinical officers from performing abortion services. 

—Compiled and edited by Abby Minor, ACP Board Member



Go After Abortion Stigma This Giving Season

Go After Abortion Stigma This Giving Season

At Abortion Conversation Projects, your donation goes right into the hands of artists and activists. At ACP, we bring together individuals and groups around the globe to combat abortion stigma in their communities by funding their ideas and projects. Our grant partners work at the grassroots level, starting with intimate and powerful conversations to work towards lasting social change.