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25 years after Roe vs. Wade Interim special The following is an excerpt of a statement released in November by the National Conference of Catholic Bishops. The twentieth century will
not end without one more anniversary to remind us that this era of extraordinary
progress is also darkened by the shadows of unimaginable tragedy. January
22, 1998 marks the 25th anniversary of our Supreme Court's rulings in Roe
v. Wade and Doe v. Bolton. Because of those decisions, more than 35 million
children have been killed, and reasons used to justify abortion are now
extended to excuse infanticide.
Today babies are being killed
in the very process of delivery by a procedure called partial-birth abortion.
Many mothers have lost their lives in abortion clinics, and countless others
survive with physical, emotional or spiritual scars. Fathers and grandparents
also suffer grief for a child they never met.
What was once seen as act
of desperation - the killing of one's own child - is now fiercely defended
as a good and promoted as a right. Even worse, a deadly blindness has come
over our land, preventing many persons of good will from recognizing the
right of innocent human lives to respect, acceptance and help. Claims of
privacy and an ethic of unlimited individualism have been used to undermine
government's responsibility to protect life. Legalized violence has spread
through our society like a cancer. The powerless of all ages are threatened.
We look upon this panorama
with shame, and also with immense sympathy for all its victims.
To all our fellow citizens
we say: Abortion is an assault on human dignity, an act of violence against
both mother and child and the whole human family. Legal protection for
unborn human life must be restored in our nation.
We recall what is best in
our common national heritage. Human beings, simply because they are human
must be recognized as persons with fundamental human rights. Our nation
fought a terrible civil war because the practice of slavery was finally
recognized to be inconsistent with our
It is just as morally repugnant
to say the same about abortion today. Our nation stands in judgment now,
as it did more than a century ago: are we to be a nation that honors its
commitments to the right to life, or not? And if not, then just what does
our nation stand for?
We see in our culture an
ongoing conflict between good and evil, a conflict between life and death.
As we strive to assure peace and justice, too often it is forgotten that
the common good can only be served when the right to life, the right on
which all other inalienable rights of the individual rest and from which
they develop, is acknowledged and defended.
In spite of the relentless
propaganda in favor of abortion, most Americans have not become fully insensitive
to the killing of children so weak that they cannot cry for help. Indeed,
the 1973 abortion decisions set in motion the broadest grassroots movement
this nation has ever seen. Our debt to those who serve the pro-life cause
is immeasurable. They are the witnesses and bearers of our nation's most
noble aspirations. In a special way, through the national debate on partial-birth,
they have focused the attention of Americans on the plight of the child.
Perhaps the most uplifting
sign of hope is the witness of those teenagers and young adults who have
come of age with legal abortion, but who are not seduced by its empty promises.
They participate in the annual March for Life, fill our National Prayer
Vigil for Life, organize supporters in their schools and campuses, run
baby showers, and write to us asking what they can do to end abortion.
We especially honor the work
of more than 3,000 pregnancy centers, as well as those hospitals, agencies
and medical centers in radical solidarity with women in need of counseling,
pre- and post-natal care, housing, material support and adoption services.
And for those women who have had abortions and seek help to deal with its
aftermath, Project Rachel and other post-abortion healing programs are
available throughout the country.
We ask you to do even more
for life. Reach out to women who are pregnant and in need of help, to families
struggling with financial or emotional difficulties. Stand by those who
wish to choose life with the witness of solidarity, hope, and service.
Teach your children to respect human life from conception to natural death.
- via Pro-Life E-News
Canada
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