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Fordham to Honor Pro-Abortion Justice
BY THOMAS McDONALD
October 19-25, 2008 Issue |
Posted 10/14/08 at 11:29 AM
In June 2000,
Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer wrote the majority opinion in the Stenberg
v. Carhart case, striking down the right of states to limit which
forms of infanticide they will tolerate. The text of the decision makes for
grim reading, as Breyer describes the mutilation of a living human being and
his extraction from the mother’s womb with cold precision.
Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia
compared the decision to the Dred Scott case,
remarking that the method “is so horrible that the most clinical description of
it evokes a shudder of revulsion.”
According to Breyer, the
Constitution allows the drawing of a “child up to the head” into the cervix
before terminating that child’s life, and individual states do not have the
right to say otherwise.
It was not a surprising decision
from a justice who has consistently voted to support abortion in his 14 years
on the Supreme Court.
On Oct. 29, Breyer is expected to be
in New York, at a dinner in his honor. The institution honoring him? Fordham
University, which describes itself as “the Jesuit university of New York.”
The Fordham Stein Prize, which
Breyer is expected to receive, is presented annually by Fordham University
School of Law’s Louis Stein Center for Law and Ethics, recognizing someone who
“exemplifies outstanding standards of professional conduct, promotes the
advancement of justice, and brings credit to the profession by emphasizing in
the public mind the contributions of lawyers to our society and to our
democratic system of government.”
In the official announcement of the
award, William Michael Treanor, dean of Fordham Law, noted, “Justice Breyer has
devoted his life to the public good. He was a brilliant, influential, and
path-breaking scholar. His government service before taking the bench was of
the highest quality. As a jurist, his opinions have been marked by
thoughtfulness, balance, rigor, and a commitment to justice and liberty.”
This is not the first time Fordham
has honored a pro-abortion Supreme Court justice. In 2001, Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg was
awarded the Fordham Stein Prize; her record of abortion advocacy is as
consistent as Breyer’s.
Seven years later, however, the
playing field has changed. A combination of surging orthodoxy among young
Catholics, rapid communication thanks to blogs and e-mail, and the rise of the
Cardinal Newman Society, a watchdog of the nation’s 224 Catholic colleges and
universities, is altering the dynamics on Catholic campuses.
“We were disappointed to see the
university, which claims devotion to the faith and to the truth, so blatantly
ignoring the essential teachings of the Church,” said Sheldon Momaney,
president of Fordham’s Respect for Life club. “The right to life is the most
basic right, from which all other human rights descend, and therefore, must be
defended above all other principles.”
Respect for Life outlined their
concerns in an open letter to Jesuit Father Joseph McShane, Fordham’s
president, requesting that the award not be presented to such a prominent
pro-abortion figure. The letter was signed by numerous campus leaders and
pro-life advocates.
As the letter states, “We make this
request for the fundamental reason that Justice Breyer’s role in public life,
in terms of his repeated and influential work in favor of legalized abortion,
has placed him in a position of complacency with grave moral evil, and leaves
him in a position of irreconcilable conflict with the fundamental teachings of
the Roman Catholic Church, and by extension, those of the university, in its
role as one of this nation’s leading Catholic universities.”
Father McShane has not met with the
group, and no one affiliated with Fordham University would speak with the
Register. The university declined to issue a general statement on the
controversy. Father McShane, as well as Kate Spencer, vice president of
communications, and various faculty members would not comment.
“We’re not going to be speaking on this
issue,” said Bob Howe, Fordham’s director of communications.
Some notable pro-life faculty
members were addressing the matter internally and declined to comment on the
record.
Joseph Zwilling, spokesman for the Archdiocese of New York, told the Register that Cardinal Edward Egan was surprised to learn that Justice Stephen Breyer would be the recipient of this year’s Fordham-Stein Ethics Prize.
“He has spoken to the leadership of Fordham University about this matter,” Zwilling said. “As a result of these discussions, the cardinal is confident that a mistake of this sort will not happen again.”
Bishops’ Statement
Catholics are paying more attention
to orthodoxy on campus, in part, thanks to
the efforts of the Cardinal Newman Society. Patrick Riley founded the
organization two years after graduating from Fordham, where he witnessed the
decline in Catholic identity almost 20 years ago.
Riley
is livid about his alma mater’s choice to honor Breyer. “In their quest for
secular prestige, Fordham officials are prepared to abandon the university’s
commitment to ‘the promotion of justice’ and ‘the protection of human rights’
by honoring a champion of abortion rights and infanticide.”
In
fact, the honor is a clear defiance of the will of the bishops of the United States.
In their 2004 document “Catholics in Political Life,” the U.S. Conference of
Catholic Bishops made their opposition to honoring pro-abortion figures quite
clear: “The Catholic community and Catholic institutions should not honor
those who act in defiance of our fundamental moral principles. They should not
be given awards, honors or platforms which would suggest support for their
actions.”
Jesuit
Father Robert Araujo, visiting professor of law at Boston College, who has also
served as an advisor to the Holy See, thinks Fordham Law needs to take a second
look at the bishops’ statement.
“This
instruction does not restrictively apply to only Catholic candidates for
honors, awards and platforms: It applies to any person,” he said. “Nonetheless,
Fordham Law School has before it the extraordinary opportunity to demonstrate
that it is a Catholic institution and that the Stein Prize, which was established
to honor ‘distinguished Americans whose dignified and dutiful careers in the
law persuasively demonstrate the pervasive and positive contributions of the
legal profession to American society,’ is intended for those whose words and
deeds enhance, not frustrate or defeat, the truths which the Church teaches so
that the common good may be fulfilled.”
Thomas
McDonald is based
in Medford, New Jersey.
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