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Diocesan Blessing

Prolife Committee of Chautauqua County Posted on April 25, 2014 by adminApril 25, 2014

bishopmaloneBlessing of a Child in the Womb

Bishop Malone and the Diocesan Pro-Life Office invite you to the Rite of Blessing of unborn children and their parents on Sunday, May 4 at St. Joseph Cathedral at 10:30 a.m. The Cathedral is in downtown Buffalo off Oak Street.

Posted in Bishop Malone, Blessing, Unborn
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Radical abortion bill dies in Colo. Senate after call to prayer, action

Prolife Committee of Chautauqua County Posted on April 17, 2014 by adminApril 17, 2014
Colorado State Capitol. Credit: J. Stephen Conn (CC BY-NC 2.0).

Colorado State Capitol. Credit: J. Stephen Conn (CC BY-NC 2.0).

From Catholic News Agency

Denver, Colo., Apr 16, 2014 / 09:42 pm (CNA/EWTN News).- Amid growing protests led in large part by the Catholic Church, the Colorado Senate on April 16 killed a controversial bill that could have banned all pro-life laws in the state.

“Lift up your hearts in gratitude to God,” said Denver Archbishop Samuel J. Aquila in a post on Twitter. “Blessings on everyone who prayed and contacted legislators! Stay involved!”

The legislation had passed committee on a party line vote. While the floor debate and vote were initially scheduled for April 15, they were delayed until the following day after Democratic State Sen. John Kefalas of Fort Collins went home sick. The Democrats control the Senate in the state by a single vote.

On April 16, however, Denver NBC affiliate 9 News reported that Kefalas – after voting in favor of the bill in committee – was saying that he was undecided about whether he would vote for it in the full Senate vote.

The leadership of the Colorado Senate subsequently spiked the legislation – setting it aside until May 8, while the legislative session ends May 7, so that the bill is effectively dead.

Originally introduced March 31, the controversial bill – S.B. 175 – only gained wide publicity last week. It sought to ban all new pro-life laws and regulations, including requirements for pre-abortion ultrasounds and restrictions on the RU-486 abortion drug.

Pro-abortion rights group NARAL Pro-Choice America, which backed the bill, had said that if it became law, it would have been the first of its kind in the country.

The legislation would have created a “fundamental right” to anything defined as “reproductive health care.” It would have barred state agencies and local government from having any policy that “denies or interferes with an individual’s reproductive health care decisions.”

Opponents had argued that the bill was vaguely worded and could have had far-reaching effects. They said it could have affected laws requiring parental involvement or notification for a minor who is seeking an abortion, as well as conscience protection laws and requirements that only licensed physicians can perform abortions.

It could also have prevented abortion regulations aimed at protecting the health and safety of women and children, opponents said. The legislation could have affected government programs and facilities that pay for or promote childbirth without subsidizing abortion, they warned. School health clinic policies and abstinence education policies could also have been impacted.

Archbishop Aquila helped lead opposition to the bill, calling together hundreds of people at a prayer vigil and assembly outside the state capitol on the afternoon of April 15, when the measure was originally scheduled to be debated.

The archbishop defended the need to restrict abortion, calling the bill “extreme and dangerously ambiguous.”

“Coloradans are not against common sense regulations on abortions, and they should have the opportunity to be able to debate and pass those regulations,” he said at the gathering.

Opposition to the bill grew quickly and prompted many Coloradans to call their legislators.

Archbishop Aquila stressed the need for further action, noting the importance of voting and lay involvement in the political process.

“Too many times we have taken a back seat. Catholics, Christians and people of good will can no longer take a back seat. We are called to work for the good and for the true,” he said at the prayer vigil Tuesday.

The Colorado Catholic Conference released a statement on the evening of April 16 thanking everyone who prayed and spoke up about the legislation.

“It was your witness that made it possible to kill this horrible piece of legislation,” the conference said. “It is because of your willingness to engage the public square that we were able to defeat SB 175.”

“Your voices matter and are needed in the public square now more than ever; please remember what we were able to accomplish and continue to be involved and make your voices heard!”

The conference cited the words of Pope Francis, who said last September: “A good Catholic meddles in politics, offering the best of himself, so that those who govern can govern.”

Posted in Abortion, Prolife
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Divine Mercy Novena for Life

Prolife Committee of Chautauqua County Posted on April 1, 2014 by adminApril 1, 2014

April 18 – 27, 2014

St. Hedwig’s Church – Doughty St. & Roberts Rd., Dunkirk
St. Hyacinth’s Church – Lake Shore Dr. E. & Pangolin St., Dunkirk

Friday, April 18 (GOOD FRIDAY): 12:00 Noon Chaplet only (St. Hyacinth’s)
Saturday, April 19 (HOLY SATURDAY): 3:00 PM Chaplet only (St. Hedwig’s)
Sunday, April 20 (EASTER SUNDAY)t 12:00 Noon Chaplet only (St. Hedwig’s)
Monday, April 21: 7:00 PM Chaplet and Benediction (St. Hedwig’s)
Tuesday, April 22: 7:00 PM Chaplet and Benediction (St. Hedwig’s)
Wednesday, April 23: 7:00 PM Chaplet and Benediction (St. Hedwig’s)
Thursday, April 24: 7:00 PM Chaplet and Benediction (St. Hedwig’s)
Friday, April 25: 7:00 PM Chaplet and Benediction (St. Hedwig’s)
Saturday, April 26: 3:15 PM Chaplet only (St. Hyacinth’s)
Sunday, April 27 (DIVINE MERCY SUNDAY):
– 2:00 PM Sunday Divine Mercy Mass – (St. Hyacinth’s)
– 3:15 PM Divine Mercy Chaplet – (St. Hyacinth’s)
– 3:30 PM Light reception in the Lyceum – (St. Hyacinth’s)

For gaining an indulgence five general conditions (being in a state of grace, detachment
from sin, confessing one’s sins sacramentally, receiving the Eucharist, and praying for the
Pope) are required. The conditions should be fulfilled on the day itself or close to it, with
the exception of sacramental confession, where it is sufficient that it be celebrated within
several days (about 20) before or after the indulgenced act. Indulgences can always be
applied either to oneself or to the souls of the deceased, but they cannot be applied to other
persons living on earth. (See: http://www.ewtn.com/expert/answers/indulgences_conditions.htm)

The following confessions fulfill the indulgence condition:

– Palm Sunday, 4/13, at 3:15-4:30 PM (at St Hyacinth’s church) – Parish confessions {several priests}
– Palm Sunday, 4/13, at 10:30 AM at St. Hedwig’s church – BMA Parish confessions (one priest)
– Monday, 4/14, at 7:00 PM (at St. Elizabeth Ann Seton Church) – Regional Penance Service
(several priests)

Posted in Novena, Prayer
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Pro-Life Groups Face Opposition in American High Schools

Prolife Committee of Chautauqua County Posted on April 1, 2014 by adminApril 1, 2014

From: Catholic News Agency

Christian legal teams are combatting non-complying public-school administrations in order to ensure pro-life students’ right to free speech is protected.

by BRIAN FRAGA 04/01/2014

Missing-255x330

One of the fliers that pro-life students at Wilson High School in Tacoma, Wash., were barred from displaying at the school.

BRANFORD, Conn. — The latest polling shows that younger people are increasingly more likely to be pro-life. But even so, Samantha Bailey-Loomis says being a devout, pro-life Catholic in a public high school is no easy task.

Classmates have harassed Bailey-Loomis, 18, and vilified her on social media. In her freshman year, a senior boy called her “Mother Teresa” and kicked the back part of her knee, which caused her to tumble down a short flight of stairs.

“Just being pro-life, you get a lot of flak at a liberal, Northeastern public high school,” said Bailey-Loomis, a senior at Branford High School in Branford, Conn.

However, it has not just been classmates and their parents — one mother called Bailey-Loomis’ student pro-life group “terrorists” during a board of education meeting — who have given pro-life students a difficult time for their views. School administrations are making them feel unwelcome as well.

Over the past year, Bailey-Loomis and students in 34 other public high schools across the country have tried forming pro-life clubs affiliated with Students for Life of America, a national pro-life nonprofit with more than 800 student chapters in colleges and high schools. In every instance of trying to get these groups’ activities approved, the students ran into opposition from school administrators, said Kristan Hawkins, president of Students for Life of America.

“In every [one of these 34] high schools, we’ve had to involve an attorney or send the high-school administration a letter from one of our attorneys informing them of our pro-life students’ rights,” Hawkins told the Register.

‘Political Correctness’

In several cases, public-school officials used delay tactics and denied privileges to pro-life clubs that were granted to other student clubs. Their motivations ranged from blatant hostility toward the pro-life movement to fears that the students’ pro-life message was too controversial and would cause major disruptions in the schools, Hawkins said.

“It speaks to the larger issue of political correctness,” Hawkins said. “Just because something is hard to talk about doesn’t mean we should choose not to talk about it.”

“Instead of allowing it to occur, the schools put up barriers that say, ‘Pro-life speech is not welcome here,’” said Matthew Sharp, legal counsel for Alliance Defending Freedom, a nonprofit Christian legal network.

“It’s tragic,” Sharp told the Register. “When school officials have the ability to say some thoughts and some ideas are not welcome at school, then what is it to stop them from doing it in other areas?”

Some public-school officials have also opposed the pro-life clubs on grounds that they cannot approve religious groups.

“That’s false. The schools must allow religious clubs on campus if they allow other non-curricula clubs,” said Jocelyn Floyd, an attorney with the Thomas More Society, a Chicago-based public interest law firm that works to preserve religious liberty.

“With that said, it must be noted that Students for Life is not a religious club,” Floyd added. “There are members who might be religious, but it’s not a religiously based club. Their purpose and mission is to promote a respect for life.”

Constitutional Right

A 1969 U.S. Supreme Court case, Tinker v. Des Moines Independent Community School District, upheld students’ First Amendment free-speech rights in public schools. The court — which affirmed three Iowa students’ rights to wear black arm bands to protest the Vietnam War — famously quipped that teachers and students do not shed their constitutional rights to freedom of speech or expression at the schoolhouse gate.

The high court established a standard — the so-called Tinker test — that says schools cannot limit their students’ free speech unless it will disrupt the schools’ educational mission.

In Tacoma, Wash., Bryce Asberg, a freshman at Wilson High School, told the Register that the school’s vice principal informed him that his pro-life group could not post fliers in the school’s hallways because they were too controversial and would upset other students.

“We were also told by the administration that if we did a day of silence, it would be more political than the school’s Gay Straight Alliance, which did the exact same thing,” said Asberg, 15.

The Thomas More Society got involved in the Wilson High School controversy, which exploded in local and national media outlets. Floyd told the Register that the school administration did not support Asberg’s group, and she added that the pro-life chapter got the runaround from the school’s student board that approves student clubs and their activities.

“The Wilson Students for Life Chapter wanted to do a diaper drive, a fundraiser to donate diapers to a local pregnancy center,” Floyd said. “The group got the runaround from the student board that approves the clubs’ events. They were never told when the student board would meet.”

Tacoma Public Schools’ Explanation

Shannon McMinimee, general attorney for the Tacoma Public Schools, disputed Floyd’s version of the story. McMinimee said the student board tabled a vote to approve the pro-life group because of some questions over the group’s charter application. However, before the student board could meet with Asberg to iron out the matter, Students for Life of America posters began appearing in the school’s hallways.

“The posters were taken down because they had not gone through the approval process, and, quite frankly, the club hadn’t been approved yet,” said McMinimee, who told the Register that the pro-life group was ultimately approved in December and that the school’s vice principal approved several of the group’s posters. At one point, there were 32 student fliers in the school’s hallways, and of those, 30 belonged to the pro-life group.

McMinimee also said the pro-life group never asked for a day of silence until the school district received a letter from the Thomas More Society.

“When [the day of silence] was asked for, when [Asberg] and his parents met with the principal, the school said, ‘Sure, that’s fine,’” McMinimee said. “To my knowledge, everything that they’ve asked for, they’ve been approved.”

Part of the fallout from the Wilson Students for Life controversy is new school policy that restricts student fliers to posting information about the groups’ meeting times and locations. No pictures or messages are allowed on the fliers.

“It’s the school’s wall. They don’t have to allow anyone to put anything there,” said McMinimee, explaining that the school was within its legal rights to do so.

Alleged Retaliation

But that’s not how Floyd interpreted the move. She called the new policy a retaliatory act for the pro-life group asserting its First Amendment rights.

“We are definitely keeping an eye on the Wilson Students for Life club,” Floyd said. “If they notice in the future that the policy is not being enforced equally, they will let us know, and we will be back.”

McMinimee said the rule is a compromise approach that allows Wilson Students for Life to advertise itself and that does not require the school administration to spend considerable time scrutinizing its posters.

“Had [Asberg]’s parents contacted the school first, they might have stopped this from happening, and we could have reached a different compromise,” McMinimee said. “Instead, they created a publicity monster.”

In Connecticut, Bailey-Loomis said her school tried to prevent her group from recruiting new members and from spreading pro-life literature to students during lunch. The administration, which did not return messages from the Register seeking comment, also told Branford High School Students for Life that it could only host events after school, a restriction not imposed on other student groups.

“We were restricted because our principal deemed our group too controversial,” Bailey-Loomis said. “He thought the other students at school were not ready for this.”

“They had hurdle after hurdle thrown at them,” said Sharp, adding that Alliance Defending Freedom contacted the Branford School District on the pro-life student group’s behalf. After discussing the issue with the administration, school officials permitted the pro-life club to meet in school and present its message, including the right to set up an information table at lunch with pamphlets and life-size models of unborn children at various stages of development in the womb.

“I commend the school for doing the right thing,” Sharp said. “This shows the importance of students standing up, making sure their rights are respected by school officials and to do whatever is necessary to secure their full First Amendment rights.”

“The students are not asking for special treatment,” said Hawkins. “They just want equal treatment.”

‘A Pro-Life Generation’

Despite the difficulties of establishing pro-life groups in some school districts, Hawkins says the fact that a struggle is even occurring is a positive sign.

“We have a pro-life generation, a generation that wants to see abortion abolished in its lifetime,” Hawkins said. “Students are feeling empowered. They’re not afraid now. Two years ago, we had a student who was trying to form his pro-life group. The school threatened expulsion, and he just kind of gave up and walked away from it. Now, that’s not the case. Students are more willing to fight for it. They are not willing to back down.”

Bailey-Loomis said she is devoted to the pro-life cause in part because her mother gave birth to her when she was 17.

“I was the result of an unplanned teen pregnancy,” Bailey-Loomis said. “Just realizing that God granted me my life, especially in such difficult circumstances, I feel like it’s an obligation to stand up for those whose lives are not protected.”

Brian Fraga writes from Fall River, Massachusetts.

Posted in Catholic News Agency, Prolife
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Chile’s ‘Day of the Unborn Child’ to Recognize Pregnant Mothers

Prolife Committee of Chautauqua County Posted on March 25, 2014 by adminMarch 29, 2014

This year, Chile joins 16 other nations in honoring pregnant mothers and their unborn children.

by CNA/EWTN NEWS 03/25/2014

SANTIAGO, Chile — For the first time this year in Chile, March 25 is officially being celebrated as the “Day of the Unborn Child,” recognizing the need to protect and care for expectant mothers and their children.

As part of the celebration which deliberately coincides with the Annunciation, the foundation Chile Unido and the Santiago subway system will hand out more than 3,000 white roses to pregnant women as a symbol of the purity of their unborn children.

The purpose of the initiative is to honor pregnant women and to raise awareness about the importance of caring for and protecting expectant mothers.

The flowers will be handed out March 25 at the Baquedano subway station in Santiago from 10am to 1pm. Volunteers from the foundation, as well as mothers who have been helped by Chile Unido, will help distribute the roses.

Veronica Hoffmann, the executive director of Chile Unido, said the foundation “has been working for 15 years to strengthen the bonds between mother and child by welcoming and helping pregnant women who are in vulnerable situations.”

The foundation helps mothers in need until their children celebrate their first birthdays, and its work has shed light on the need to ensure healthy births for babies and to promote measures to care for and support pregnant women in their new role as mothers, Hoffman said.

The Day of the Unborn Child was first made a holiday in El Salvador in 1993 and later celebrated in Argentina, Guatemala, Costa Rica, Nicaragua, Dominican Republic, the Philippines, Peru, Paraguay, Slovakia, Austria, Mexico, Spain, Uruguay, Brazil and Cuba.

Posted in Catholic News Agency, Prolife
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