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Making History: Black Pro-Lifers Hail Historic Moment and Redouble Efforts
BY TIM DRAKE
Register Senior Writer
November 16-22, 2008 Issue |
Posted 11/11/08 at 8:20 AM
President-elect Barack Obama’s
election Nov. 4 was historic in more ways than one.
Not only does it represent the first
time an African-American has been elected to the White House, but his running
mate Joseph Biden’s election represents the first time that a Catholic will
occupy the vice presidency.
Black Americans feel the historical moment
most keenly. Especially black pro-lifers.
“It’s an incredibly historic moment
for our nation. There were many African-Americans who didn’t think we would see
this in our lifetimes,” said pastor Arnold Culbreath, urban outreach director
for Protecting Black Life in Cincinnati.
“However,” he added, “abortion
remains the leading cause of death in the black community. With President-elect
Obama being as aggressively pro-abortion as he is, that makes our work more
urgent and necessary.”
The Church used the moment to both
congratulate and educate.
Chicago’s Cardinal Francis George,
president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, wrote to Obama “to
express our congratulations on your historic election as president of the
United States” and to “pray that you will use the powers of your office to meet
them with a special concern to defend the most vulnerable among us and heal the
divisions in our country and our world. We stand ready to work with you in
defense and support of the life and dignity of every human person.”
Pope Benedict XVI also sent a
telegram (story, page 5).
Black pro-life leaders struggled
with mixed emotions about the win.
“While there is celebration and
revelry around what happened, there is a path which the African-American
community is moving down regarding the disproportionate impact abortion is
having on us as a people,” said Culbreath. “There are over 1,200 black
abortions occurring in our country every day.”
The Rev. Johnny Hunter also stressed
the impact of abortion on blacks. He is national director of Life Education and
Resource Network in Fayetteville, N.C.
Hunter pointed out that in its early
days, Planned Parenthood was started in part to purge America of minorities.
“People don’t realize that abortion
has killed more blacks than the Ku Klux Klan ever lynched. Planned Parenthood
is the biggest of the abortion providers,” he said. “Planned Parenthood
endorsed Senator Obama, and he made promises to them. Any person of color who
has made a promise to a group that targets groups of color isn’t worthy of
being elected.”
Culbreath noted that blacks have
traditionally supported the Democratic Party, but that by doing so, they’ve
been forced to go along with a host of other issues that they don’t agree with,
such as abortion and the redefinition of marriage.
“They’ve had to take the bitter with
the sweet, not realizing the Pandora’s box that has been opened,” said
Culbreath.
Michael Steele is the former
Maryland lieutenant governor and chairman of GOPAC, the Republican Party’s
political action committee. He’s also a Catholic. He said that the party needs
to do a better job of reaching out.
“We need to reach out to blacks,
Hispanics, Catholics — show them they have another place to go apart from the
Democrats,” said Steele.
Based upon Democratic outreach
efforts in his own Cincinnati neighborhood, Culbreath agreed that the
Republican Party needs to do better.
“The neighborhood where I live is
75% black. The Democratic Party did a yeoman’s job knocking on doors and
hanging things on doors,” said Culbreath. “There was no reciprocation by the
Republican Party.”
What the Election Means
Alveda King, pastoral associate of
Priests for Life and niece of Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., challenged
pro-life voters, especially those who voted for Obama.
“To everyone who said, ‘I am
pro-life, but I will vote for a pro-abortion candidate this time,’ I say now is
the time to prove your commitment to the unborn,” said King. “March for truth
and justice. Flood the White House and Congress with messages that you do not
agree with the slaughter of innocent children. Stand up for ‘the least of
these.’”
Most pro-life black leaders agreed
that Obama’s election means difficulty for pro-life activists.
“I think it spells trouble for the
life issue,” said Hunter. “I’m 100% convinced that pro-life activists are going
to have a tough time during his administration.”
One of Obama’s first actions after
Election Day was the appointment of Rahm Emanuel as his chief of staff.
Emanuel, a congressman from Illinois and former Clinton staffer, has a 0%
pro-life voting record.
Associated Press reported Nov. 9
that Obama plans to use his executive powers to make an immediate impact when
he takes office, perhaps reversing Bush administration policies on public
funding of embryonic stem-cell research.
Hunter noted one pro-family bright
spot in the election. He’s convinced that the greater numbers of
African-Americans who voted led to the passage of ballot initiatives protecting
traditional marriage.
“The black majority has always voted
for Democratic candidates,” said Hunter. “However, because so many blacks
showed up and voted, propositions protecting traditional marriage, like the one
in California, passed.”
California Proposition 8’s passage
means that the state’s constitution will now define marriage as the union of
one man and one woman. It reverses a May 2008 decision by California’s Supreme
Court allowing same-sex “marriages.” Bans on same-sex “marriage” were also
approved in Florida and Arizona. (See related front-page story.)
Lawson Lipford-Cruz, a senior at
Ohio State University, is president of Black Students for Life. He appreciated
the historic moment, but wished it went further.
“Obviously, it’s a historic moment
and shows that we as black people have come a long way in this country,” he
said, “but at the same time, I’m frustrated because a lot of people haven’t
been able to see the bigger picture.
“The unborn don’t have rights just
like we didn’t as black people,” said Lipford-Cruz. “It’s frustrating that
people can’t see that.”
Tim Drake is based in
St. Joseph, Minnesota.
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