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Reaching Out to Congress Through Interns
BY ELENOR K. SCHOEN REGISTER CORRESPONDENT
September 2-8, 2007 Issue |
Posted 8/29/07 at 12:25 PM
WASHINGTON â Melissa Ohdenâs life was almost cut short at
its earliest beginnings.
Ohden was aborted at about five months gestation, but she
survived and was placed in a neonatal unit until she was adopted.
âInstead of being angry or bitter about the circumstances
that surrounded my arrival into this world, I have chosen to be grateful,â she
said. âThe time has come in my life when I believe I need to use my story to provide
a voice for women and children and the obstacles that they face in the world we
all live in.â
She got that platform at a briefing Aug. 14 in Congress.
Sponsored by Feminists for Life, the briefing focused the attention of about 30
college-age interns and other young professionals on Capitol Hill to the hard
realities of abortion and its effect on women.
According to Feminists for Life of America President Serrin
Foster, collegians interning on Capitol Hill are the nationâs future leaders.
They are also leaders on their college campuses, she said.
The event inspires them with the stories of women who have
experienced the devastation of abortion, but turned their lives around for the
better.
Since college-age women are at highest risk for seeking to
end pregnancies, accounting for half of all abortions performed, the emphasis
is on creating a holistic, woman-centered solution they can bring to their
campuses across the country, she stated.
The newest speakers for Feminists for Life represent women
who have faced âthe biggest challenges people talk aboutâ as reasons for
needing legalized abortion, according to Foster. They discuss the difficult
choices they made â some choosing to abort a pregnancy and regretting it; some
deciding to carry the pregnancy to term, even against threats and hardships,
one influenced by her own motherâs courageous decision to spare her unborn
child.
Foster said these women make the point that âpeople can live
through these problems, come out better for it, and make the best of itâ by
trying to help others make the right choice for life.
They come from all over the United States, are professionals
in various fields, but donate their time to educating others.
Reality Check
Karen Shablin, a health policy expert, is a converted, âcard-carrying
member of NARAL Pro Choice America.â But she had an epiphany as a director for
Medicaid in New Jersey in the late 1990s. Reading the statistics on the numbers
of women having abortions, often more than once, which were covered by
Medicaid, she realized her ideas did not match the reality.
âI thought abortions were tragic but rare,â Shablin said.
âBut I realized that if that isnât true, then what else isnât true? You donât
hang on to a belief if it doesnât hold up in real life.â
She was taken aback, as well, by those around her â fellow
professional women for whom abortion âwas just a routine decision.â
Having a change of heart on abortion caused her to make
changes in her own life.
âI canât undo my mistakes over the years â having an abortion,
advocating abortion â but I can help others to learn from my mistakes,â she
emphasized. âEvery life counts.â
Ann Lowrey Forster was a pro-abortion sophomore in college
when she decided not to abort her pregnancy. Her boyfriend urged her to change
her mind, and when that didnât happen, he deserted her.
She gave birth that summer, returned to finish her junior
year that fall, and graduated with honors. The young law clerk, married with
two children, is now an active pro-life feminist.
Forster stressed the need for resources and support for
pregnant and parenting women.
In fact, Feminists for Life helped introduce legislation in
Congress recently that would do that. On Feb. 15, U.S. Reps. Mary Kaptur,
D-Ohio, and Sue Myrick, R-N.C., co-sponsored the Elizabeth Cady Stanton
Pregnant and Parenting Student Services Act of 2007. The bill would establish a
pilot program providing $10 million in grants to be used for establishing
offices for pregnant and parenting student services on college campuses.
Need for Support
Midwesterner Joyce Ann McCauley-Benner was raped at age 20
but chose not to abort the pregnancy, not knowing if it was the result of rape
or from a relationship she was having.
She recalled the agony of facing that decision.
âI know what itâs like to want to run as far away as
possible from a problem; how it feels to hang on to âIf I wasnât pregnant
anymore, it would all be okay again,ââ said McCauley-Benner, who finished
college while raising her son. She now has two boys and serves on a task force
working for racial justice.
In the case of Angelica Rosales, it was her motherâs
decision not to abort her after being advised to that influenced the young
woman to found a pregnancy center shortly after finishing college.
Rosales brings to the discussion her perspective in working
daily with pregnant and parenting women, most of whom are college age, facing
crises. She has seen firsthand how lack of support hurts women.
âThis failure to provide resources is a reflection of how
far we still need to go to eliminate the root causes of abortion,â Rosales
said.
These dramatic life stories had a profound effect on two
young professionals in the audience. Mike Barnett, field director of Students
for Life of America, said that âno one left the room without a heavier heart,
but also with a new outlook on the issues of abortion vs. a pro-life
philosophy.
He was moved by Ohdenâs life, saying she was âbringing so
much joy and hope to others, which wouldnât have happened if the abortion had
succeeded in ending her life.â
Deirdre McQuade said the stories âwere so compelling. People
were hanging on every word.â As director of planning and information at the
Pro-Life Secretariat for the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, she felt it
really showed how we âhave failed to meet the needs of women in these
circumstances.
âCollege students who get pregnant while at school really
get pressured to get an abortion. It takes tremendous courage and
resourcefulness to make a life-affirming choice of parenting or adoption,â she said.
âThese women speakers are living proof that under difficult circumstances, they
are strong enough to get through any crisis, especially if they have access to
resources, support, and a plan for their motherhood. â
Elenor Schoen is based in
Shoreline, Washington.
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