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We Won’t Go Away
BY The Editors
January 20-26, 2008 Issue |
Posted 1/15/08 at 1:27 PM
America, we won’t go away. Many people wish we would, and
heaven knows we would rather be doing almost anything else. But we can’t go
away, and we won’t.
I’m sure you’ve seen us. We may have made you angry, or sad,
or we may have made you turn quickly away and find something else to look at.
You may have seen us a few days before Christmas outside the
Planned Parenthood building. The old man with the rosary, the college kids in
sweats, the sad-looking woman clutching brochures and an “I Regret My Abortion”
sign — that was us.
Maybe you felt offended that we stuck abortion in your face
as you rushed out to do last-minute shopping, cheered by Christmas songs on the
radio. Well, we felt offended that the “clinic” was open that day. We wanted to
enjoy ourselves, too.
Or maybe you heard one of us at a town meeting you attended
at the school or the senior center. Maybe it was a savvy young woman lawyer
that you heard voice the pro-life argument. Or maybe the voice of the pro-life
movement you heard was a halting, nervous voice that got a little too angry or
whose words got a little too tangled. In either case, that was us, too.
We may have made you uncomfortable that day. We’re sorry for
that. But we’ll be there again at the next town meeting, too. And the next. And
the next.
We won’t go away, and we won’t stop talking about abortion.
We won’t stop saying, again and again, that this is wrong and it has to stop.
America, you know more about the unborn than you ever have
before. Life magazine used to sell out when they put an unborn baby on the
cover. Now, we’ve seen National Geographic’s “In the Womb.” We have sonogram
photos at the front of our baby books and we saw our children for the first
time in utero, through a video monitor.
America, you know more than ever that abortion hurts women.
Those of us who have had an abortion know the guilt at what we’ve done and the
anger at those who made it seem inevitable, who refused all help except the
kind that kills. Those of us who have a friend who has had an abortion know it
is a topic that we must never, ever discuss. It causes too much sadness,
inflicts too much pain that can’t be relieved.
America, you know what abortion is, and we know you know. We
won’t stand by and pretend with you that nothing is happening.
And we won’t go away, because we can’t make abortion go away
from our own consciences. Abortion stings us. The sting is there when we see an
empty playground and remember that one in three children in America dies by
abortion. The sting is there when we read of successful surgery saving unborn
children in the womb, and remember that babies don’t survive the most common
surgery in the womb.
Is abortion necessary for women’s rights? Ask the teens
impregnated by older men and brought to the “clinic” by them, too. Is it a
matter of choice? Ask the women who wanted to have their babies but were
badgered and pressured and tricked and even forced to kill instead.
But doesn’t abortion help women? Ask the ones who died on
the operating table — or the ones who say they wish they died because the
depression is too much to bear.
What would America be like without abortion? We can’t even
imagine. In It’s a Wonderful Life, George Bailey gets a glimpse of what Bedford
Falls would be like if he hadn’t been born, but then he returns to a world
where that tragedy never happened.
We won’t get to return to the world we could have had.
Did we abort a statesman who would have changed the course
of this country? Did we abort the musician who would have taken that art — and
our emotions with it — to new heights? What cures, stories, jokes, athletic
feats or technological innovations did we abort? What great actor is missing
from our movies, what great teachers will never inspire our kids at school?
No, America, we won’t go away, no matter how much you want
us to or how much we want to go.
We want to think we would have told the slave-sellers, “No
way. Not here. I will use every legal means to stop you.” We like to think we
wouldn’t have sat still in World War II Germany as the trains rumbled by. We
wish we could have sat with Rosa Parks or prayed with Ruby Bridges on the way
to school.
But we can’t do any of that. What we can do is remind you,
America, in season and out of season, of the words you were founded on: “All
men are endowed by their Creator with the right to life.”
So you’ll see us shivering in the cold again this January
for the March for Life. And you’ll see us next January, and the January after
that, and the January after that, until we wear you down at last and there’s no
more reason to march.
And if we die before you change, America, we’ll be able to
stand before God and say, “I defended the defenseless. I stood for the weak. My
brothers and sisters couldn’t cry ‘Stop,’ so I cried it for them. And I refused
to go away.”
Reprinted in commemoration of the Jan. 22 35th anniversary of the Roe
v. Wade decision legalizing abortion.
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