Mother Teresa has Anti-Abortion Answer
from
Los Angeles Times Syndicate by Cal Thomas
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At a National Prayer Breakfast in Washington, February 3, Mother Teresa of
Calcutta, delivered the most startling and bold proclamation of truth to power I
have heard in my more than 30 professional years in Washington.
Before an audience of 3,000 - that included the president and his wife, the vice
president and his wife and congressional leaders, among others - the 83-year-old
nun, who is physically frail but spiritually rhetorically powerful, delivered an
address that cut to the heart of the social ills afflicting America. She
said that America, once known for generosity to the world, has become selfish.
And she said that the greatest proof of that selfishness is abortion.
Tying abortion to growing violence and murder in the streets, she said, "If we
accept that a mother can kill even her own child, how can we tell other people
not to kill each other?...Any country that accepts abortion is not teaching its
people to love but to use any violence to get what they want."
At that line, most of those in attendance erupted in a standing ovation,
something that rarely occurs at these sedate events. At that moment,
President Clinton quickly reached for his water glass, and Mrs. Clinton and Vice
President and Mrs. Gore stared without expression at Mother Teresa. They
did not applaud. It was clearly an uncomfortable moment on the dais.
She then delivered the knock out punch: "Many people are very, very concerned
with children in India, with the children of Africa where quite a few die of
hunger, and so on. Many people are also concerned about all the violence
in this great country of the United States.
"These concerns are very good. But often these same people are not
concerned with the millions who are being killed by the deliberate decision of
their own mothers. And this is what is the greatest destroyer of peace
today - abortion, which brings people to such blindness."
What? Abortion destroys peace and causes blindness toward the sick, the
hungry and the naked? Abortion leads to wars between nations?
Of course it does, if life is regarded so lightly and its disposal becomes so
trivial, so clinical and so easy.
Why should people or nations regard human life as noble or dignified if abortion
flourishes? Why agonize about indiscriminate death in Bosnia when babies
are being killed far more efficiently and out of the sight of television
cameras?
Mother Teresa delivered her address without rhetorical flourishes. She
never raised her voice or pounded the lectern. Her power was in her words
and in the selfless life she has led. Even President Clinton, in his
remarks that followed, acknowledged that she was beyond criticism because of the
life she has lived in service to others.
At the end, she pleaded for, pregnant women who don't want their children to
give them to her. "I am willing to accept any child who would be aborted
and to give that child to a married couple who will love the child and be loved
by the child." She said she has placed over 3,000 children in adoptive
homes from her Calcutta headquarters alone.
She has answered the question, "Who will care for all these babies if abortion
is again outlawed?" Now the question is whether or not a woman
contemplating abortion wishes to be selfish or selfless, to take life or to give
life.