Marnie Glickman, right,
breast-feeds her daughter, Calliope, while Rachel Brusseau breast-feeds
her son, James, in front of the Delta Airlines gate at Portland
International Airport in Portland, Ore., Nov. 21, 2006. [AP]
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South Burlington - Carrying signs
with slogans such as "Best in-flight meal ever," scores of mothers breast-fed
their babies at airports around the United States Tuesday in a show of
support for a woman who was ordered off a plane for nursing her daughter without
covering up.
"It's about raising consciousness about our culture's sexualization of the
breast. Breast-feeding needs to be supported wherever and whenever it happens.
Babies don't know the meaning of `wait,'" said Chelsea Clark, 31, wearing a "Got
breast milk?" T-shirt as she nursed her 9-week-old son at the Burlington
airport.
About 25 women turned out for the "nurse-in" at the airport, parking
themselves near a ticket counter in a peaceful -- but not-so-quiet
-- demonstration. Similar protests were held at airports in Boston; Las
Vegas; Columbus, Ohio; Nashville, Tenn.; Harrisburg, Pa.; Hartford, Conn.;
Albuquerque, N.M.; and Louisville, Ky.
Some of the women carried signs that read, "Don't be lactose intolerant" and
"Breasts -- Not just for selling cars anymore."
On Oct. 13, Emily Gillette, 27, of Santa Fe, N.M., was ordered off a Freedom
Airlines plane about to take off from the Burlington airport after a flight
attendant asked her to cover up while she was breast-feeding her year-old
daughter.
She had been sitting on the New York-bound plane -- which was three
hours late in leaving -- when she began nursing. The flight attendant
handed her a blanket, but she refused it. She was removed from the plane along
with her husband and child.
The airline later disciplined the unidentified employee. But "lactivists" and
women's rights supporters were outraged, and Gillette filed a complaint with the
Vermont Human Rights Commission.
"It's a basic human thing that we are doing and we should be able to do it in
public without being kicked off planes, without being told to sit in bathrooms,"
said Susan Parker, 30, who participated in a demonstration at Bradley
International Airport near Hartford, Conn., along with 10-month-old daughter
Anna.
Gillette herself joined about 30 women, children and fathers at the
Albuquerque airport. "When women are harassed for breast-feeding, a woman can
end up feeling ashamed and she shouldn't," she said, tears welling in her eyes.
A the Nashville airport, about 25 mothers, fathers and children took part in
a demonstration, holding signs that said "Breast fed is best fed" and "Best
in-flight meal ever." About 40 mothers nursed their babies at the Portland,
Ore., airport.
Passers-by called out words of encouragement at the Columbus, Ohio, airport,
where about a dozen women sat on benches and on the floor, some breast-feeding.
And seven mothers, five of them nursing, gathered near Delta gates at Las'
Vegas' McCarran International Airport.
"When we hear someone has gone so far as to kick a nursing mother off a
flight, it's terrible," said Tami Schlosser, 38, a lactation educator who
counsels new mothers about breast feeding in southern Nevada.
But some passers-by disapproved of the protesters.
"I think you should be discreet," Nell Gaupel said upon seeing the
demonstration in Louisville, Ky.