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Photo: Addie Mena, CNA
By: Catholic News Agency / EWTN
WASHINGTON DC - Young participants at the 2013 March for Life voiced enthusiasm and hope as they stood up for the dignity of every human life, from conception to natural death.

This year's march has “a lot of energy,” observed Tony Visintainer, a 23-year-old seminarian at Mount St. Mary's in Maryland.

“I don’t know if it’s the 40th anniversary,” Visintainer told CNA, “but there’s a difference in the atmosphere.”

He noted that the massive crowds were chanting and dancing in the streets.

Hundreds of thousands of participants - mostly young people - braved freezing temperatures and snow to attend the March for Life in Washington, D.C. on Jan. 25.

The annual march commemorates the anniversary of Roe v. Wade, the 1973 Supreme Court decision that effectively legalized abortion throughout the nation.

Marchers listened to speakers at a rally on the National Mall before walking to the Supreme Court. Many carried signs voicing their support for life and prayed silently.

Christy Guillory, a student at St. Emory Catholic High School in Louisiana was “very excited” to be at the march for the first time, despite the cold weather.

“Snow’s a new thing for me,” she said, adding that the experience of being there with such huge pro-life crowds was “a lot to take in.”

Guillory said that she came to the march this year in order “to give witness” to the lives of the unborn, echoing the sentiments of many other participants.

Derek Smith of Chillicothe, Ohio, also came with his parish to the march in order to give witness. He explained that he had converted to the Catholic Church after his first March for Life four years ago.

“Really, this is what made me decide to be Catholic,” Smith said, noting that one thing that changed his mind about the Church was “the power behind” the march, both in prayers and the dedication of the individuals who participated.

Some women and men who attended march spoke out from experience about the pain that abortion left in their hearts and minds.

Josephine Todd, 59, of St. Petersburg, Fla., had an abortion in 1980 before becoming pro-life.

She explained that she came to the March for Life to “give my heart,” and stand up for what is right, showing “what I should have never done” and encouraging others to avoid her mistake.

Attendance among college students was also high, with many schools sending record-breaking numbers of students to the nation's capital.

Pro-life groups from several Ivy League schools gathered together for a group picture before the rally and lent their support to the march.

Caroline Bazinet, a student at Princeton University, noted the similarities between the civil rights and pro-life movements.

She explained that it is important to help people realize that the lives of millions of children have been lost by “standing in" for the missing members of her generation.

Harvard University student Chrissy Rodriguez, age 20, said that she is confident in the ability of the pro-life movement to bring about change.

“I’m only one person,” she said, “but I’m one person who can shout to the world: ‘This is what I believe!’”

 
 
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The Catholic World Report
The evil of abortion inflicts unimaginable pain, but Jesus offers us healing and renewal. -Cardinal SeÁn P. O’Malley of Boston

WASHINGTON—The chairman of the U.S. bishops’ Committee on Pro-Life Activities called on Catholics to participate in “Nine Days of Prayer, Penance and Pilgrimage,” January 19-27, to mark the 40th anniversary of the U.S. Supreme Court’s Roe v. Wade decision.

“Our nation greatly needs our prayers and personal sacrifices,” said Cardinal SeÁn P. O’Malley of Boston.

January 22, 2013 marks the 40th anniversary of the tragic U.S. Supreme Court rulings Roe v. Wade and Doe v. Bolton. Without grounding in the Constitution, law or human rights, these decisions have made it legal for the past forty years in the United States to end the life of an unborn child. Since then fifty-five million children never had the chance to be born. The scope of this loss is staggering, yet the Court and many in our society relegate it to a matter of personal choice.
 
As part of the ongoing response to innocent children’s lives being taken with the protection of the law, the U.S. Catholic bishops have launched a major pastoral initiative calling for prayer and penance to promote and build a culture of life, marriage and religious liberty.

The initiative includes “Nine Days of Prayer, Penance and Pilgrimage” from January 19 to 27, 2013. I invite Catholics in the United States to join me in this novena. It includes daily prayer intentions for the healing and conversion of our nation, for elected officials who support abortion, and for all people whose lives have forever been changed by an abortion. The novena is available through social media, text messaging and email, to be helpful for youth and other pilgrims traveling to pro-life events and marches and for those wishing to participate from their parishes and homes.
 
Our nation greatly needs our prayers and personal sacrifices. The evil of abortion inflicts unimaginable pain, but Jesus offers us healing and renewal. He came not to condemn us, but to free us from the burden of the wrongs we have done so that all might be saved. His Divine Mercy knows no limits; we need only to ask his forgiveness. If you know of anyone suffering from the effects of an abortion experience, please encourage them to seek help.
 
It is our hope and prayer that our defense of human life and religious freedom, our witness to the dignity of each and every human person, our compassionate service and our prayers calling on the infinite love and mercy of God will spark a renewal of love and commitment to the true good of others. Only a love that seeks to serve those most in need, whatever the personal cost to ourselves, is strong enough to overcome a culture of death and build a civilization worthy of human beings created in God's image.
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For more information on the Supreme Court’s abortion decisions: http://endroe.org
To receive daily prayers and reflections for the novena: www.usccb.org/9days
To see the help available after an abortion:  http://hopeafterabortion.com


 

    March for Life

    "Abortion, euthanasia, human cloning, for example, risk reducing the human person to a mere object: life and death to order, as it were!"
    -Pope John Paul II

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