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Rockford Police take image of Christ from Pro Life advocate at the Northern Illinois Women's Center October 11th, 2009
Activists spread message against abortion
Several thousand demonstrators in
BY ROBERT SAMUELS rsamuels@MiamiHerald.com
Thousands of people clustered on major street corners in
They were but a small part of a national rally called ``The Life Chain,'' an annual event organized by churches that calls on its members to stand up for their beliefs while standing on a street corner for an hour.
Priests, pastors, parents and children held prayer circles, sang songs and held signs with statements such as ``Adoption, the Loving Option'' and ``Abortion Is Murder.''
``I came out here for the dignity of women and the protection of life from the moment of fertilization to its natural end,'' said Cecilia Soñé, who protested alongside a collection of home schoolers near U.S. 1 and Ponce De Leon Boulevard in Coral Gables. ``This is so important -- we're defending life.''
As she spoke, three cars raced by and honked in support.
Save for nasty comments from some passing drivers or a trio of a University of Miami students who held mostly obscene signs, there were no major counterprotests.
In Broward, about 1,500 members from about 60 churches lined up along
In Miami-Dade, organizer Jorge Gonzalez estimated 2,000 people gathered at various spots along U.S. 1, from
Organizers in both counties said they had record numbers of supporters, which they think was bolstered by the same activist spirit of protest that has produced tea parties against government spending and picketing against national healthcare reform.
``The political climate has made this to be a bigger and better event with more people aboard,'' Aman said. ``People are really standing up for what they believe in.''
Meanwhile, in
Five of the six Roman Catholics on the high court -- Chief Justice John Roberts and Justices Sonia Sotomayor, Antonin Scalia, Anthony Kennedy and Samuel Alito -- heard the homily by Cardinal Daniel DiNardo; the sixth, Justice Clarence Thomas, did not attend. Justice Stephen Breyer, who is Jewish, was there as well.
Speaking at the annual Red Mass the day before the opening of the Supreme Court term, DiNardo said that people represented by lawyers are ``more than clients. . . . In some cases the clients are voiceless for they lack influence; in others they are literally voiceless, not yet with tongues and even without names, and require our most careful attention and radical support.''
As DiNardo spoke, protesters opposed to abortion demonstrated in front of the church.
DiNardo did not elaborate on the rights of the unborn, focusing instead on how the complexity of the law can have a dehumanizing effect on those who practice it.
Increasing specialization within the law is ``dizzying'' and such formal knowledge ``frequently becomes semi-mechanical, even distancing,'' DiNardo said at the Cathedral of St. Matthew the Apostle. ``The law and lawyers are around because justice among human beings will always be an issue.
``Even sophisticated knowledgeable human lawyers need reminding, need a divine fire . . . both in their personal lives and in their profession itself.''
The Associated Press contributed to this story.
Bursting the Bubble: Pro-life Advocates Fight
By James Tillman and Peter J. Smith
Within this 50 foot zone, pro-life protestors would be prohibited from approaching closer than 8 feet to a person without their consent, in order to educate, counsel, or give leaflets to them. Violations could be punished by a fine of up to $500.00.
The amendment to the city's Disorderly Conduct Ordinance was introduced by Chicago Alderman Vi Daley on September 9. On September 30 the amendment passed committee. Planned Parenthood of Illinois praised its passage as balancing "the need to protect patient and staff safety while preserving the freedom of speech."
Ann and Joseph Scheidler of the Pro-Life Action League also attended the committee meeting. According to Ann, Alderman Toomey, who managed the meeting, gave extensive time to Planned Parenthood and abortion supporters, but was not nearly so generous with pro-life advocates.
Beth Kanter of Planned Parenthood testified that pro-life protestors make it difficult for women to reach their "services," while Katherine Rabbit of Family Planning Associates directly mentioned the 40 Days for Life prayer vigil as one of the reasons to pass the bill.
Family Planning Associates, which performs third-trimester abortions, has been losing business thanks to the peaceful pro-life witness of the 40 Days for Life campaign in
Ann Scheidler says she believes the real goal of the ordinance is to scare pro-life advocates away from the sidewalks in order to save abortion facilities by protecting their business. Pro-abortion advocates have invoked the murder of George Tiller to defend their claims that the ordinance is needed, but Scheidler points out that they have had no incidents of any kind like that with the pro-life community in
The proposed ordinance is modeled after a yet sterner measure passed in
The ACLU has issued a statement which, while approving aspects of the bill, opposes the 8-foot buffer zone on the grounds that "Our society should tolerate the widest amount of free speech in public ways." The buffer zone, the statement says, substantially burdens "leafleting, a time honored and unintrusive form of speech."
The Thomas More Society, a pro-life law center, applauded the ACLU, which generally works against traditional faith and family values, for standing up for freedom of speech in
The Thomas More Society, which is based in
The City Council began to consider the ordinance on October 7, 2009 at 10 A.M.
