Pro-life groups from around the state will hold a rally and march on Saturday, Jan. 31, to protest the plans by University of Wisconsin Hospitals and Clinics (UWHC) and Meriter Hospital to perform late-term abortions at the jointly operated Madison Surgery Center.
Day: January 29, 2009
Local pro-life marchers react
The following are quotes from local marchers with the young adult group from the Diocese of Madison:
Conversion happens: One voice can make a difference
Editor’s note: This commentary was written for the bulletin of the Cathedral Parish in Madison for the weekend of January 24 and 25.
What a great feast it is that we celebrate today! Saul, the most ardent persecutor of the Faith, becomes St. Paul, its greatest proponent. That is really something to celebrate . . . for a number of reasons.
For one thing, this feast is a tremendous sign of hope for the Church as she travels through history. In this world, the Church has enemies. But we should look at each of them with the awareness that here may be the next Saul: the greatest enemy can become the greatest ally.
Don’t let abortions be performed at Madison surgery center
I am writing to encourage everyone who reads this newspaper to either make a phone call or write a letter to the UW Hospital System. I have put all of their contact information at the end of this article.
Supporting ‘life always’ at Edgewood High
MADISON — A group of students from Edgewood High School (EHS)were among the tens of thousands who gathered in Washington, D.C., on January 22 for the 36th annual March for Life, reflecting a growing awareness at the school for the need to address the issues of respect for life.
“It’s important for us to be faithful citizens and to advocate for life and fairness,” said Tonya Bubolz, a religious studies teacher at EHS and a moderator of two relatively new activities at the school dedicated towards raising awareness of life issues.
‘A future pregnancy would be too risky’
Various medical conditions can affect a woman’s ability to carry a pregnancy and, at times, even threaten her and her child’s life.
Some of these conditions include pulmonary hypertension, Marfan’s syndrome, and certain congenital problems with the aorta. When a doctor informs a woman that she cannot become pregnant in the future without serious consequences to herself and her baby, having her tubes tied might seem to be the most appropriate response. Some would further argue that since the sterilization would be for “medical reasons,” it would be an “indirect sterilization” and therefore morally acceptable.
A transcendental movement
The scene here in Washington Thursday seemed familiar — thousands of Americans gathered on the Capitol Mall, having traveled far distances to rally together and send a message to the nation. The faces in the crowd were young and old, filled with a sincere hope for the future but ready to bring change to society.
Reflexiones en la inauguración y el tema de la esperanza
Como muchos de ustedes, estoy seguro, yo he mirado, con interés, los acontecimientos que ocurrieron la semana pasada. Nuestro país ha atestiguado un acontecimiento enormemente histórico con la inauguración de presidente Barack Obama – un acontecimiento que habla de los enormes pasos que nuestro país ha hecho, incluso en mi curso de la vida, en términos de igualdad racial. Aunque se ha convertido en un cliché excesivo en las semanas recientes, habían épocas en que nadie en mi generación habría podido soñar que “veríamos este día.”
Priest makes excellent case against intervention in Iraq
To the editor:
Fr. Jim Murphy’s letter in the December 25 edition makes an excellent case against our country’s military intervention in Iraq.
Concerns about militarism and treatment of prisoners
To the editor:
I wish to add to Fr. Jim Murphy’s concerns (December 25, 2008) about our military policy, especially his points on militarism and torture.