Pro-life marchers want their message to transcend politics

WASHINGTON (CNS) — In a sea of printed signs and huge student groups in colorful toboggan caps at the March for Life rally, Ed York was an outlier.

He’d made the two-hour drive to the National Mall Jan. 19 from his home in Martinsburg, West Virginia, not with a group on a bus pilgrimage, but only with his daughter Autumn and a small homemade placard emblazoned “As a Former Fetus, I Oppose Abortion.”

He stood out in his solitary approach, but York, who has attended previous marches, didn’t mind.

People gather during the annual March for Life rally Jan. 19 in Washington. (CNS photo/Michael Reynolds, EPA)

“This is David versus Goliath, all right,” he said. “The media’s still pumping out some old stuff about human rights. This (abortion) is going to end one day. But, you know, you have to be patient in life.”

On a bright, sunny and almost spring-like morning highlighted by President Donald Trump’s remarks to the rally before the march from the White House Rose Garden and members of Congress, there appeared to be little interest from the marchers in political questions. After all, they had all made their travel plans long before they knew the list of speakers.

“Certainly, to have the president show his support for March for Life is encouraging,” said Katrina Gallic, a senior at the University of Mary in Bismarck, North Dakota. However, she added, involvement for others is “more than a political stance, but should be seen as an ethic for all of humanity.”

The University of Mary sent 200 marchers, clad in blue and orange caps, on a 30-hour bus journey from the frigid northern Great Plains.

Gallic. who traveled separately from from New Jersey, began attending marches with her family when she was in elementary school.

“My parents showed us by the way they lived” and dinner-table conversations, she said. “I’m very grateful for it. I think it requires a lifetime commitment on the political level and the cultural level.”

Gallic met Vice President Mike Pence at the Eisenhower Executive Office Building before the march. “Our generation is very much behind him, and he has the support and prayers of many,” she said.

Abby Johnson, a former Planned Parenthood clinic director who now heads the pro-life organization Then There Were None, said culture change should have a higher priority than legislation.

“I actually think the pro-life movement needs to separate itself from the (Republican Party). That’s what we need to be focusing on: opening the tent and bringing more diversity into the movement,” she said, citing pro-life Democrats in Louisiana who have tightened abortion restrictions there.

Pro-life advocates gather near the U.S. Supreme Court during the annual March for Life in Washington Jan. 19. (CNS photo/Tyler Orsburn)

Members of Students for Life from the Moody Bible Institute in Chicago sported yellow umbrellas.

“The yellow stands for joy,” student Molly Malone explained. “The umbrella is representative of how we will stand for both mothers and children.”

Malone wasn’t interested in political discussions either, although “politics is the means by which we’re going to end (abortion) eventually.”

Margaret Banloman and Emily Rogge, both freshmen at St. Michael the Archangel Catholic High School in Lee’s Summit, Missouri, had a colorful placard with an image of the Mary and the slogan “Our Salvation Began With an Unplanned Pregnancy.” The pair came up with the idea and drew the sign on their cross-country bus ride, which Banloman characterized as “redemptive suffering.”

Sean Moberg, who was attending the rally with friends from the Ukrainian Catholic National Shrine of the Holy Family in Washington, waved one of the few visible protest signs, which had, on one side, “Trump — No” and on the other, “I Stand With Catholic Feminists.”

“I think that in his life and his politics in general, he doesn’t respect the dignity of the unborn person,” Moberg said of Trump. “I think he does more harm than good.”

Moberg has marched for the past eight years. “I’m always impressed with what a positive event it is.”

It also was Dr. Paul Camarata’s eighth year at the march. The Catholic neurosurgeon from the Archdiocese of Kansas City, Kansas, is a parishioner at the Church of the Nativity in Leawood, Kansas.

He said was there on behalf of all life issues, including conscience protection and physician-assisted suicide. But abortion is such an “issue of magnitude,” he told CNS, pointing to the 60 million babies that have been aborted since the Roe decision legalizing abortion on demand nationwide.

He said by coming to the march, which he first began to attend with his children, he gets re-energized to return home and represent the pro-life cause. A member of the Catholic Medical Association, he is the chairman of neurosurgery for the University of Kansas Health System.

Caryn Crush, who spent 14 hours on a bus from Louisville, Kentucky, was with a group of 54 from Immaculata Classical Academy, and said she was attending in support of children born with Down syndrome. Appearing at March for Life and opposing abortion, especially for children born with Down syndrome, was her way to “change society’s perception of them and show they do have value.”

“We’re here to be a voice,” she added. “This is more of a celebration of life whether the president’s here or not.”

httpv://youtu.be/fnNIc9CJWxM First-time marchers included Jerilyn Kunkel of Fishers, Indiana, who made the trip with her husband Larry, a member of the Knights of Columbus. “I got a good night’s sleep. That helped a lot,” she said.

Father Kurt Young was accompanying 700 high schoolers from the Archdiocese of New Orleans. They were part of what became a 14-bus caravan in a two-day trip that lasted a total of 32 hours because of icy roads in Mississippi.

He said politics and legislation weren’t the students’ main priority, either. “Everyone here is here to make a peaceful, prayerful protest,” the priest said.

Working along the march route were members of the Catholic Mobilizing Network, which opposes the death penalty.

“We’re known for our stickers: ‘Who Would Jesus Execute?’ said Alexandra Carroll, the organization’s vice president. “We use them as conversation starters. They help humanize the death penalty.”

Carroll thought it a successful effort.

“We think it’s such an important part of the Catholic faith, this kind of constant pro-life ethic.”

Author: Catholic News Service

Catholic News Service is the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops’ news and information service.

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