Medra’s story offers an important understanding of how regulating midwifery ultimately harms birthing women by reducing midwife diversity. Requiring licensure for midwives ultimately ends up culling out midwives who do not practice through memorization, facts, figures and tests. While these skills are highly regarded in our dominant white, western culture, there are other valuable and ancient types of wisdom which have always informed practices such as midwifery throughout the ages. Academics, testing and paperwork were never Medra’s strengths but her intuition and creativity, as well as her lack of jealousy or fear contributed to her midwifery in ways that are ultimately just as effective.
Let’s take a moment to wonder if the maternal health crisis we are seeing in our modern times, especially for black, indigenous and people of color, could not have something to do with the fact that midwifery regulation robs birthing women of this alternative approach which, for some, could be more relevant. Proponents of midwifery regulation tell us:
“Oh, yes, you can practice your alternative, cultural, traditional and spiritual beliefs as long as it’s within the context of our dominant cultural structure.”
This is the lie of colonization.