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Friday, 28 June 2013
Tuesday, 25 June 2013
Young people out in force for pro-life leafleting
Our group of young men and women.We spent the day leafleting in north west London, giving our thousands of pro-life leaflets. |
Last week a group of us (seven in total) spent the day leafleting in north west London, together with a young man who lives in the area, who read some of the posts on this blog and leafleting and campaigns and felt inspired to do something. A few weeks earlier I went to meet him and spent just over an hour leafleting. We agreed that we'd do it again because it's vital work.
We arrived at our meeting point, distributed the maps, decided which pairs would cover which areas, and headed off. Leafleting is so simple - it's a matter of putting a leaflet through a letterbox. It means that in an hour hundreds of homes get a good quality pro-life leaflet with educational and supportive information. It means people get something pro-life that hasn't been watered-down or distorted by a biased journalist or tv channel. It means that the public realise there are people in society who are opposed to the murder of unborn children, and do not want to see more lives damaged thanks to abortionists who earn a tidy sum doing it.
We were treated to a generous lunch, then headed out again for the final push, covering a wide area and even more homes. It was an enjoyable day and time well spent.
Thank you to those who have already contacted me and distributed leaflets. Please send me a few paragraphs and photos of your own leafleting experience. It's nice to give people recognition, and it helps encourage others out there who are doing the same.
Perhaps you are someone who hasn't done much or any leafleting. Maybe you're busy in exam season, or with other work. It would be really great if we could have even more people to bring the pro-life message to others using the simple method of leafleting.
To order leaflets and get help to organise a leafleting team in your area, email me: danielblackman@spuc.org.uk
Monday, 24 June 2013
Women Deliver Conference 2013: do women have a right to kill but no right to conceive?
Peter Singer: supports infanticide |
One of the speakers was infanticide advocate Peter Singer who suggested that rising population might make it necessary to forcibly prevent families from having children. (See here for consideration of the origins of the over-population myth.)
‘It is possible of course’ Singer told the conference ‘that we give women reproductive choices, that we meet the unmet need for contraception but that we find that the number of children that women choose to have is still such that population continues to rise in a way that causes environmental problems.’ He also suggested that it was “appropriate to consider whether women’s reproductive rights are 'fundamental' and unalterable or whether… there can be imaginable circumstances in which you may be justified in overriding them.” In other words, if abortion and contraception fail to reduce human population growth it would, in Singer’s view, be morally acceptable to forcibly prevent men and women from having children. The reality however is that population growth is already on the verge of collapsing in many parts of the world, with all the economic and social dangers which that entails, precisely because of the widespread legitimisation of abortion and contraception.
Kavita Ramdas, an Indian representative of the Ford Foundation, made similar points arguing that “you can force women to have less children [sic], you can force people to consume less”. Reversing the racism often shown by the population control movement she asserted that the United States and Europe ‘are truly putting an unsustainable load on the planet for all of us’ and suggested that ‘if Americans consume more than Africans, they should be forced into a one child policy’.
I wonder how the delegates attending the conference would have responded if a speaker had suggested that the so-called 'right' to abortion had to be overriden to deal with declining population growth? The right to kill seems to be unchallengeable but a woman's right to truly control her own fertility by conceiving children within the self-giving supportive union of marriage can be overriden to suit the political agenda of ideologues such as Singer and Ramdas.
These calls were addressed to representatives of the UN, national governments, and some of the largest NGOs in the world. The forces arrayed against the family, and especially against it’s most vulnerable member, the unborn child, are very powerful, very wealthy and very determined.
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Friday, 21 June 2013
Yet another SPUC activist leads the way with 40 Days for Life
This year the first Welsh 40 Days for Life campaign was launched in Cardiff city, by a young woman called Rhoslyn Thomas, amongst others, who has been a longstanding activist of SPUC and a 2012 intern. Another SPUC activist, Kelechi, has also been proactive in setting up a 40 Days for Life in her hometown in Nigeria, and supporting the 40 Days for Live vigil in Milton Keynes.
A little while ago Rhoslyn posted some good news on Facebook about a child spared death at the hands of an abortionist. Here is a fuller version below:
40 Days for Life Milton Keynes, with Andy (R), founder David Bereit (L) and Kelechi (L, centre) |
This year, we ran our very first 40 Days For Life campaign in Cardiff on St. Mary's Street. The abortion clinic is unmarked and, for the most part, unknown. It is a busy street with lots of shops, night clubs, cafes and restaurants and offices. Indeed, the clinic itself is above a restaurant and the building is shared with a number of offices. We were a few weeks in when we were approached one day by a young man who calmly asked us what we were doing. We replied that we were praying for an end to abortion, but specifically praying for everyone who entered that clinic, that they would choose life. He told us that his girlfriend was inside the clinic, discussing and planning her abortion.
He told us that she had aborted a previous baby and that they also had other children but that they were living in temporary accommodation and were being pressured by social services to abort the baby that his girlfriend was currently carrying though they wanted their baby. When I heard him say this, I was saddened but not very surprised.
Again and again we are told that this is a woman's 'right to choose', yet it seems to me that few women do choose. Yes, some do, but many do not. More often than not, there seems to be some source of coercion. As the suffragette, Mattie Brinkerhoff, wrote in 1869, "When a man steals to satisfy hunger, we may safely conclude that there is something wrong in society - so when a woman destroys the life of her unborn child, it is an evidence that either by education or circumstances she has been greatly wronged" We told him that we knew of an organisation in London, the Good Counsel Network, who could help him. I told him what I knew to be the truth: if he phoned them and asked them for help, there is no way they would turn him down.
They would (not might) help them with anything they needed: money, clothes, prams, food, counselling, accommodation. He seemed glad to know this and we were hopeful that he would phone, though he declined our offer to use our phones on the spot. So, after he and his girlfriend left, all we could do was pray and pray.
Being a former intern at SPUC and having parents who have volunteered and worked for SPUC for many years, we had quite a network of people to call on for prayers! We had people up and down the country praying for this couple and many offers of a home and help for them from total strangers! I was sorry that I didn't ask for a telephone number from the couple but I felt that it was so important, at a time when they were being pressured from all sides, not to add to this pressure and to leave them in God's hands. I kept asking the people at Good Counsel over the following weeks if they had phoned or not.
Sadly, they had not but I didn't give up on them because I know that no prayer goes unanswered. 40 Days For Life ended on the 24th March this year. By then, we still hadn't heard but we didn't forget about that couple. We all slipped back into normal life until one day about a week ago I got an e-mail from a member of the vigil's 'core team' saying that they had some good news...the couple had phoned Good Counsel and they are keeping the baby!
To say this was the best news I had heard all year was an understatement! I was so thankful that we had been there so that we met that young man and gave him that little card. It was such a little thing but it saved a life! In fact, it not only saved the baby, but it saved their mother and father from another abortion and the repercussions of extinguishing that life.
I think that few reading this blog could imagine just how many people screamed and shouted at us saying that we were "intimidating women" by standing outside a building where human beings are killed and peacefully praying. I am glad that we were there and we will be back for another 40 days, so that when the next couple comes up to us needing support and love, we will be there.
Rhoslyn (L) with 40 Days for Life founders Shawn and David. Also pictured is Ann Howard, a former SPUC intern |
Pro-abortion protesters oppose the prayer vigil in Cardiff |
40 Days for Life vigil supporters praying |
Labels:
40 Days for Life,
abortion,
end abortion,
events,
SPUC
Tuesday, 18 June 2013
Not all killing is abortion
Finding the rights words |
You will hear the phrase "abortion kills an Innocent child". Yes, an innocent child is killed, his or her life is terminated, extinguished. He or she ceases to be a living human being on this earth. He or she ends up dead.
However, abortion is more than just only a situation in which a child is killed, a moral wrong of the gravest kind. There are different types of killing - pulling up flowers or vegetables from the ground, killing germs, killing animals for food, killing in self-defence, accidental killing, the killing of a guilty person by a legitimate state (known as the death penalty). And then there is the deliberate killing of an innocent person, which we call murder.
You may have heard someone say that it's best to avoid saying "abortion is murder" as it's too inflammatory, it'll "put people off". However, morally speaking, abortion is murder, and it should be legally considered as such. In the UK we still retain the criminal offence of child destruction. We have the Offences Against the Person Act 1861, which
addresses crimes such as murder and manslaughter, and also includes the
offence of attempting to procure an abortion. In the USA the then government passed the Unborn Victims of Violence Act 2004. According to the pro-life organisation National Right to Life, there are currently 28 US states that recognise the unborn child as a victim of differing degrees of homicide and manslaughter. Yet to say that use of the term "murder" should only be restricted to legal contexts would mean we couldn’t call all sorts of killings carried out the by the Nazis (or Stalinists, Maoists etc who were acting within their laws) ‘murders’ either – a morally obtuse position.
It seems fair to argue that some people are opposed to saying "abortion is murder" on tactical and oratorical grounds - they don't want to put people off, or invoke a strong reaction from a listener. Perhaps it sounds a little too confrontational or even extreme. It might be upsetting to parents who have had an abortion. However, abortion is the murder of an innocent person, namely, the child in the womb.
Those prolifers who object to saying "abortion is murder" will often say that people who support abortion are deceptive in their choice of words and play word games that deliberately obscure the true nature of abortion. We hear phrases like "emptying the contents of the womb" and " gentle suction to remove the products of conception".
If a person refuses to and objects to saying "abortion is murder" there is a danger they will undermine the legitimate point they want to make against the deceptive use of language by abortion supporters. To some degree, they participate in the same obsfuscation they object to in others who do the same but to support abortion.
Monday, 17 June 2013
Hitler's Struggle for Eugenics: Part II
In this post we
continue our consideration of the eugenic nature of Adolf Hitler’s notorious
political manifesto ‘Mein Kampf’. Part I can be read here.
The first post in our long-running series on eugenics began
with a consideration of the work of Thomas Robert Malthus because even though
Malthus was not himself an advocate of eugenics his writings on over-population
form one of the fundamental foundations of the movement. We have already seen
that when Margaret Sanger was seeking a new ideology following her
disillusionment with Marxism she turned to neo-Malthusianism. A similar
sequence of events can be seen in the life of Adolf Hitler. After his failure
to gain entry to Vienna’s prestigious School of Art he went through a succession of
menial jobs and, according to his eugenic manifesto Mein Kampf, spent almost all his spare time reading, particularly
on social and political questions. He became disillusioned with much of
contempory discourse because it did not address the question of human population
growth and the ‘racial quality’ of that population. “Germany” he wrote “has an annual
increase in population of nearly nine hundred thousand souls. The difficulty of
feeding this army of new citizens must grow greater from year to year and
ultimately end in catastrophe, unless ways and means are found to forestall the
danger of starvation and misery in time.”
There is a remarkable unanimity between Hitler’s and Sanger’s
views about the inevitability and consequences of overpopulation. The solutions
they proposed however were somewhat different. Sanger sought to limit
population growth through the rigorous control of human reproduction,
particularly of those groups deemed ‘unfit.’ Hitler however was a more
consistent follower of Darwin.
In Mein Kampf he rejects the view
that ‘the increase of births could be artificially restricted’ because he
thought it preferable to allow ‘natural selection’ to take its course; the weak
would fall before the strong and the evolution of the Aryan race would continue
on its course. ‘Therefore’ he wrote ‘anyone who wants to secure the existence
of the German people by a self-limitation of its reproduction is robbing it of
its future.’ Hitler in fact wished to see the German population grow as much
possible and hoped that the ‘problem’ of over-population would be solved by
conquering new territories. For Hitler’s ‘Aryan race’ over-population was not a
problem; it was weaker subject races who would have to perish to make way for
them. Many of us were taught at school that Hitler’s desire for lebensraum (living space) in the east
was a central plank of his political programme and was one of the most important motivations
behind his conquest of Poland
and invasion of the Soviet Union. It is far
less likely that we were informed that the basis of this Nazi policy was the
Malthusian myth of overpopulation that has, for more than two centuries, had
such a malign influence over all aspects of academic, political and popular
culture.[1]
Adolf Hitler |
Margaret Sanger |
To be continued…
[1] In a
discourse delivered before the Catholic University of Ireland John Henry Newman noted that ‘the Malthusian
teaching’ had become ‘a sine qua non
in a seat of learning’ and that his contemporaries thought it ‘simply ignorance
not to be a Malthusian’, ‘Discourse
VIII: Knowledge Viewed in Relation to Religion’, published in John
Henry Newman, The Idea of a University, (London, 1852).
Friday, 14 June 2013
Tenth anniversary of landmark Catholic document on homosexual unions
St Charles Lwanga and Companions |
The freedom of the pro-life movement, as well as that of ordinary men and women up and down the country, to express normative opinions about marriage and the family is being severely threatened by the intolerance of the ‘LGBT lobby.’ It is increasingly considered ‘homophobic’ simply to express beliefs that were accepted everywhere just a few years ago. This new totalitarianism is a threat to all of us but no group is more at risk than the unborn child. The family founded on the marriage of one man and one woman is the ‘natural habitat’ in which children are conceived and brought up. In the United Kingdom infants conceived outside of marriage are four to five times more likely to be aborted than those conceived within marriage. It is clear therefore that anything that undermines the traditional understanding of marriage will put unborn children at risk. This is because when the link between marriage and procreation is broken the child is more likely to be seen not as the natural and expected result of the sexual act but as a ‘problem’ to be resolved through abortion.
Since this document was published by the CDF we have seen ever increasing attacks on the traditional understanding of marriage, which, let it be said clearly and unambiguously, is the only understanding of marriage which accords with both right reason and the experience of men and women down the centuries. It will be helpful to remind ourselves of the insights contained in this document, which “since this question relates to the natural moral law…. [is] addressed not only to those who believe in Christ, but to all persons committed to promoting and defending the common good of society.” A selection of quotes from the document, under our own headings, are included below.
Marriage is only
between one man and one woman
“The Church's
teaching on marriage and on the complementarity of the sexes reiterates a truth
that is evident to right reason and recognized as such by all the major
cultures of the world. Marriage is not just any relationship between human
beings. It was established by the Creator with its own nature, essential
properties and purpose. No ideology can erase from the human spirit the
certainty that marriage exists solely between a man and a woman, who by mutual
personal gift, proper and exclusive to themselves, tend toward the communion of
their persons. In this way, they mutually perfect each other, in order to
cooperate with God in the procreation and upbringing of new human lives.”
Homosexual unions are
in no way comparable to marriage
“There are absolutely no grounds
for considering homosexual unions to be in any way similar or even remotely
analogous to God's plan for marriage and family. Marriage is holy, while
homosexual acts go against the natural moral law. Homosexual acts “close the
sexual act to the gift of life. They do not proceed from a genuine affective
and sexual complementarity. Under no circumstances can they be approved”.
Sacred Scripture condemns homosexual acts “as a serious depravity... (cf. Rom 1:24-27; 1 Cor 6:10; 1 Tim 1:10). This judgment of Scripture does not of course permit us to conclude that all those who suffer from this anomaly are personally responsible for it, but it does attest to the fact that homosexual acts are intrinsically disordered”. This same moral judgment is found in many Christian writers of the first centuries and is unanimously accepted by Catholic Tradition”
Homesexual unions must be opposed
“In those situations where
homosexual unions have been legally recognized or have been given the legal
status and rights belonging to marriage, clear and emphatic opposition is a
duty. One must refrain from any kind of formal cooperation in the enactment or
application of such gravely unjust laws and, as far as possible, from material
cooperation on the level of their application. In this area, everyone can
exercise the right to conscientious objection.”
Civil laws must conform to right reason or they do not bind in conscience
“…civil law cannot contradict right
reason without losing its binding force on conscience. Every humanly-created
law is legitimate insofar as it is consistent with the natural moral law,
recognized by right reason, and insofar as it respects the inalienable rights
of every person. Laws in favour of homosexual unions are contrary to right
reason because they confer legal guarantees, analogous to those granted to
marriage, to unions between persons of the same sex. Given the values at stake
in this question, the State could not grant legal standing to such unions
without failing in its duty to promote and defend marriage as an institution
essential to the common good.
…
Civil laws are structuring
principles of man's life in society, for good or for ill. They “play a very
important and sometimes decisive role in influencing patterns of thought and
behaviour”. Lifestyles and the underlying presuppositions these express not only
externally shape the life of society, but also tend to modify the younger
generation's perception and evaluation of forms of behaviour. Legal recognition
of homosexual unions would obscure certain basic moral values and cause a
devaluation of the
institution of marriage.”
Homosexual unions lack the biological complementary present in marriage
“Homosexual unions are totally
lacking in the biological and anthropological elements of marriage and family
which would be the basis, on the level of reason, for granting them legal
recognition. Such unions are not able to contribute in a proper way to the
procreation and survival of the human race. The possibility of using recently
discovered methods of artificial reproduction, beyond involving a grave lack of
respect for human dignity, does nothing to alter this inadequacy.
Homosexual unions are also totally lacking in the conjugal dimension, which represents the human and ordered form of sexuality. Sexual relations are human when and insofar as they express and promote the mutual assistance of the sexes in marriage and are open to the transmission of new life.”
Adoption of children by homosexual couples is gravely immoral
“…the absence of sexual
complementarity in these unions creates obstacles in the normal development of
children who would be placed in the care of such persons. They would be
deprived of the experience of either fatherhood or motherhood. Allowing
children to be adopted by persons living in such unions would actually mean
doing violence to these children, in the sense that their condition of
dependency would be used to place them in an environment that is not conducive
to their full human development. This is gravely immoral and in open
contradiction to the principle, recognized also in the United Nations
Convention on the Rights of the Child, that the best interests of the child, as
the weaker and more vulnerable party, are to be the paramount consideration in
every case.”
Politicians who vote for homosexual unions commit grave sin
“When legislation in favour of the
recognition of homosexual unions is proposed for the first time in a
legislative assembly, the Catholic law-maker has a moral duty to express his
opposition clearly and publicly and to vote against it. To vote in favour of a
law so harmful to the common good is gravely immoral.
When legislation in favour of the recognition of homosexual unions is already in force, the Catholic politician must oppose it in the ways that are possible for him and make his opposition known; it is his duty to witness to the truth.”
Conclusion
“The Church teaches that respect
for homosexual persons cannot lead in any way to approval of homosexual
behaviour or to legal recognition of homosexual unions. The common good
requires that laws recognize, promote and protect marriage as the basis of the
family, the primary unit of society. Legal recognition of homosexual unions or
placing them on the same level as marriage would mean not only the approval of
deviant behaviour, with the consequence of making it a model in present-day
society, but would also obscure basic values which belong to the common
inheritance of humanity. The Church cannot fail to defend these values, for the
good of men and women and for the good of society itself."
Tuesday, 11 June 2013
Recent parliamentary question on teens and abortion
Below is a recent question asked in parliament, about teenage girls and abortion. The answer and tables are presented below. In 2010 3,716 teenage girls between 13-15 years old in England and Wales had an abortion. Two girls under 13 had and abortion. Also in 2010, 22,870 teenagers aged 16-18 had an abortion. David Paton, professor of economics at the university of Nottingham, is one of the foremost experts in the UK on teen pregnancy, contraceptive provision, and abortion, especially under the previous government and has written valuable studies on this topic. You can read his studies and presentations on the internet and on the SPUC director blog.
Every year SPUC sends trained speakers into secondary schools, colleges, and universities all over the UK, presenting an accurate fact-based pro-life presentation for students. It is one of the most important things we do, because pupils and students deserve to hear the truth. To find out more email email eileenbrydon@spuc.org.uk or danielblackman@spuc.org.uk
Anna Soubry: Data are set out in the following tables. Data for 2012 are not yet available; data for 2011 (the most recent published) have been shown instead.
Every year SPUC sends trained speakers into secondary schools, colleges, and universities all over the UK, presenting an accurate fact-based pro-life presentation for students. It is one of the most important things we do, because pupils and students deserve to hear the truth. To find out more email email eileenbrydon@spuc.org.uk or danielblackman@spuc.org.uk
Abortion: Young People
Mr Andrew Turner: To ask the Secretary of State for Health how many and what proportion of abortions were performed on (a) children under 13 years old, (b) 13 to 15 years olds and (c) 16 to 18 year olds in the smallest geographical NHS area for which information is available in (i) 2012, (ii) 2010 and (iii) 2008.Anna Soubry: Data are set out in the following tables. Data for 2012 are not yet available; data for 2011 (the most recent published) have been shown instead.
Thursday, 6 June 2013
Graduating this summer?
Every year students graduate from university, which is great, but it means it's easy to find oneself like a fish out of water when it comes to carrying on the pro-life work.
For several years the university has been a place where you get to meet and spend time with like-minded peers. You get to attend talks, have discussions, plan events, go to conferences together, share news, and stay connected using the useful Facebook groups and pages.
Graduating will mean leaving than context behind. It'll mean moving back home, or moving into new rented accommodation, perhaps in a new city. The job-hunt will be well underway, or perhaps you'll be starting a new job.
These things quickly and easily take up lots of time and energy. That, minus the pro-life peer group, and it's easy for pro-life activity to slide to the bottom of the list. It might feel like there is nothing going on where you live, certainly nothing where you work, nor at your local church if you attend one.
So, it's important that you, we, don't let that happen. There's a lot to be said about keeping good friendships going anyway, but how much more when you share a common purpose. Below are some suggestions that can help with the transition from university.
1. Don't drift from pro-life peers. There's a million ways to stay in touch, so no excuses.
2. Stay informed - carry on reading the news sites, blogs, postings on Facebook groups, sign up for updates from pro-life groups, follow pro-life groups on Twitter and Facebook, read articles and books.
3. Order a batch of leaflets and do door-to-door leafleting where you live. Do a few streets and keep a note of the ones you've done. Email danielblackman@spuc.org.uk to make an order.
4. Join a local SPUC branch (email tonymullet@spuc.org.uk for your nearest branch). The branches effectively operate as a pro-life presence in a given area: letter-writing, fundraising, distributing petitions and newspapers, getting church members active, leafleting, pro-life chains, display tables and so on. If there is no SPUC branch where you live, start one. It's not difficult.
6. Go along to your local 40 Days for Life vigil. Again, if there isn't one, start one in your area. However, starting one and keeping it going for 40 days, requires lots of time, so only take such a role on if you're certain you can commit to it properly.Good Counsel Network also run daily vigils in London.
7. Letter-writing to your local MP, local newspapers, and religious leaders. Share information with them, raise a point about something that is happening in parliament. It's easy for an MP or church leader to think no one cares about pro-life issues because no one ever writes or speaks to them about it.
8. Volunteering is another good practical thing to do. There are pro-life pregnancy centres and SPUC offices that have plenty for volunteers to do. Email danielblackman@spuc.org.ukif you'd like to volunteer.
For several years the university has been a place where you get to meet and spend time with like-minded peers. You get to attend talks, have discussions, plan events, go to conferences together, share news, and stay connected using the useful Facebook groups and pages.
Graduating will mean leaving than context behind. It'll mean moving back home, or moving into new rented accommodation, perhaps in a new city. The job-hunt will be well underway, or perhaps you'll be starting a new job.
These things quickly and easily take up lots of time and energy. That, minus the pro-life peer group, and it's easy for pro-life activity to slide to the bottom of the list. It might feel like there is nothing going on where you live, certainly nothing where you work, nor at your local church if you attend one.
So, it's important that you, we, don't let that happen. There's a lot to be said about keeping good friendships going anyway, but how much more when you share a common purpose. Below are some suggestions that can help with the transition from university.
1. Don't drift from pro-life peers. There's a million ways to stay in touch, so no excuses.
2. Stay informed - carry on reading the news sites, blogs, postings on Facebook groups, sign up for updates from pro-life groups, follow pro-life groups on Twitter and Facebook, read articles and books.
3. Order a batch of leaflets and do door-to-door leafleting where you live. Do a few streets and keep a note of the ones you've done. Email danielblackman@spuc.org.uk to make an order.
4. Join a local SPUC branch (email tonymullet@spuc.org.uk for your nearest branch). The branches effectively operate as a pro-life presence in a given area: letter-writing, fundraising, distributing petitions and newspapers, getting church members active, leafleting, pro-life chains, display tables and so on. If there is no SPUC branch where you live, start one. It's not difficult.
6. Go along to your local 40 Days for Life vigil. Again, if there isn't one, start one in your area. However, starting one and keeping it going for 40 days, requires lots of time, so only take such a role on if you're certain you can commit to it properly.Good Counsel Network also run daily vigils in London.
7. Letter-writing to your local MP, local newspapers, and religious leaders. Share information with them, raise a point about something that is happening in parliament. It's easy for an MP or church leader to think no one cares about pro-life issues because no one ever writes or speaks to them about it.
8. Volunteering is another good practical thing to do. There are pro-life pregnancy centres and SPUC offices that have plenty for volunteers to do. Email danielblackman@spuc.org.ukif you'd like to volunteer.
Tuesday, 4 June 2013
A baby is born, thanks to a young woman who talks the talk and more importantly, walks the walk
I received this email (below) from a friend, Kelechi. She has been a regular volunteer with SPUC in our London office, has attended several of our conferences and training days, including the conference on international development, maternal health, and abortion.
Through SPUC, Kelechi came into contact with 40 Days for Life (we went to the fundraising banquet in Westminster a few years ago). We also provided Kelechi with advice and some materials (foetal model set, leaflets etc). Since then Kelechi has been a regular member of the 40 Days for Life in Milton Keynes (an initiative that involves a public prayer vigil outside an abortion facility, prayer and fasting, and community outreach). She also went over to her home town of Abuja, Nigeria, in January. She spoke at several churches and halls, leading to the founding of the pro-life group "Save the Unborn Babies" Nigeria. She also helped to establish a 40 Days for Life campaign in Nigeria. As a result at least 6 babies have been spared abortion. In fact, Kelechi has made and will continue to make trips back to Nigeria to ensure Save Unborn Babies develops and keeps up its lifesaving and educational work. On top of all this Kelechi works full-time as a business studies lecturer at a college of further education.
In my opinion, Kelechi is a excellent example of a motivated young woman who has put her pro-life conviction into effective action - outward facing, bringing the message to wider society, not being stuck in a cycle of jumping from talk to talk, conference to conference - talking the talk but doing little else. We are honoured to be able to work with her.
Through SPUC, Kelechi came into contact with 40 Days for Life (we went to the fundraising banquet in Westminster a few years ago). We also provided Kelechi with advice and some materials (foetal model set, leaflets etc). Since then Kelechi has been a regular member of the 40 Days for Life in Milton Keynes (an initiative that involves a public prayer vigil outside an abortion facility, prayer and fasting, and community outreach). She also went over to her home town of Abuja, Nigeria, in January. She spoke at several churches and halls, leading to the founding of the pro-life group "Save the Unborn Babies" Nigeria. She also helped to establish a 40 Days for Life campaign in Nigeria. As a result at least 6 babies have been spared abortion. In fact, Kelechi has made and will continue to make trips back to Nigeria to ensure Save Unborn Babies develops and keeps up its lifesaving and educational work. On top of all this Kelechi works full-time as a business studies lecturer at a college of further education.
In my opinion, Kelechi is a excellent example of a motivated young woman who has put her pro-life conviction into effective action - outward facing, bringing the message to wider society, not being stuck in a cycle of jumping from talk to talk, conference to conference - talking the talk but doing little else. We are honoured to be able to work with her.
Dear SPUC Family,
Please rejoice with us at Save The Unborn Babies Pro-Life Initiative Nigeria, as our first saved baby was delivered on Friday, 31st May at about 1:25 am. Mum and baby are doing very well, and we are pleased to affirm that it is through your kind support that this baby boy has been saved from the abortion her mother had intended for him.
This baby may not have been here today if you did not give me the opportunity to work with SPUC as a volunteer while receiving pro-life training, nor join 40 Days for Life at Milton Keynes and other pro-life activities in Luton Good Counsel. Thank you also for your kind support with educational materials and encouragement towards my visit to Nigeria for pro-life work.
In December when I visited Nigeria, this new mum (then pregnant) had made some money deposit for an abortion and was in search of the balance to undergo the procedure. After I spoke in Church, she met me crying as she unfolded her ordeal, telling how her fiance kicked her out of the house despite her pregnancy. We encouraged her to keep her baby while supporting with her ante-natal bills. A member also offered her an accommodation. On Friday, 30th May, the young lady called me with the good news that she has put to bed. All glory be to God.
I must thank you all at SPUC for your encouragement and support to embark on this mission which has helped save this baby boy from forced death. Many thanks to Andy Burton's 40 Days for Life, Milton Keynes and Luton Good Counsel for their inspiration. It is incident like this, that give us fulfilment and encouragement to keep on doing the work.
God bless you all.
Kind regards,
For: Save The Unborn Babies Pro-life, Nigeria
Kelechi Anyaghara
First baby born, and sleeping well by the looks of it |
Kelechi (3rd from left) at the SPUC maternal health conference with speakers and SPUC staff |
Kelechi with 40 Days for Life founders at the London banquet |
Young adults hold a public pro-life display |
Kelechi speaking to a local group, telling them about pro-life work |
Kelechi gave a training session to a group of recent graduates |
Labels:
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abortion,
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SPUC
Wednesday, 29 May 2013
Missionaries to society
On the 25 May 2012 The Daily Telegraph reported that the Home Secretary Teresa May said "homosexuals will be missionaries to the wider society and make it stronger." She made this comment in relation to government plans to legalise same-sex marriage.
In the same vein pro-abortion voices say they defend abortion because they take motherhood so seriously. Similarly, self-described pro-choice advocates present abortion as a means of exercising free choice and ensuring women's equality.
What we have is a moral inversion - bad is called good. That which causes harm is called enhancing.
What our society continually and urgently needs is for pro-lifers, those who believe in the dignity of the human person from conception, and the institution of heterosexual marriage as best for children born and unborn, to be missionaries to the wider society, and make it stronger. We can and should go to talks and conferences, read articles, and learn the arguments, but if we do not take the message to others we are not being effective. We end up creating a pro-life cottage industry where we talk to ourselves about what we already know and agree upon.
Pope Francis, in 2005 whilst still a cardinal in Argentina, gave a sermon to a group of pro-lifers. His sermon included the following message. Although it will have obvious relevance for Christians, especially Catholics, it's useful for us all in appreciating the spirit we need in order to be missionaries to the wider society:
But it is a road that is full of wolves, and perhaps for that reason they might bring us to the courts, perhaps, for that reason, for caring for life they might kill us. We should think about the Christian martyrs. They killed them for preaching this Gospel of life, this Gospel that Jesus brought. But Jesus gives us the strength. Go forth! Don't be fools, remember, a Christian doesn't have the luxury of being foolish, I'm not going to repeat, an idiot, a fool, he can't give himself the luxury. He has to be clever, he has to be astute, to carry this out.Society, unborn children and their parents, need you to be a missionary right where you live - whether village, town or city. Taking the pro-life message to the public - leafleting, table displays, prayer vigils, pro-life chains, walks of witness, supporting pro-life pregnancy centres, writing letters to local and national press, calling into radio shows, objecting to BPAS and Marie Stopes abortion adverts in pub and club toilets etc etc - not only brings the message to a wider audience, but also strengthens our resolve to be actively pro-life.
Fr (Blessed) Miguel Pro, Mexican martyr 1927 |
White Rose movement - student resistance to Nazi atrocities |
Greensboro Woolworth restaurant sit-ins 1960 |
Pakistani politician Shahbaz Bhatti murdered for opposing oppressive sharia laws |
Pro-life street display table |
Large pro-life prayer vigil |
Pro-life display table at a local council festival SPUC's Anthony Ozimic explaining the nature of marriage on national television Young adults March for marriage in Paris |
Pro-life tour with the Olympic torch |
Post-abortive mothers public witness |
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