Pro-choice activism in the 1970s–1980s The Women's League for Conservative Judaism in the 1970s and 1980s used the phrase "religious freedom" to defend their policy on Women's right to an abortion. They argued that banning or restrictions on abortion was a violation of their "religious values." The members of this organization "overwhelmingly favored legal abortion and largely sympathized with the feminist movement." The organization argued that "the continued power of Christian leaders to delimit the public terms of religious discourse, even in a country with no established religion," was infringing on their religious rights and "values." The organization also discussed the role of "the women's right to choose" and how this has manifested and is reinforced by official Jewish scripture such as
the Hebrew Bible. The group attempted to manage the general beliefs of the overarching Conservative Jewish communities with the more progressive beliefs of the younger generation of Jewish practitioners. == References ==