Notes from Pro-Life Camp
Part Two of Five
By Jonathan Rogers
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Jonathan Rogers |
Last week, I had the honor and
pleasure of being invited out to the "North" Camp of Wisconsin
Teens for Life, directed by the eminent Joleigh Little. You've
probably read Joleigh's stories in National Right to Life News
where her expertise and passion for bringing teenagers into the
Right to Life Movement comes shining through. (And if you
haven't, then you're not signed up for the
NRL News, and should be).
A pro-life camp isn't just a fun
way to spend a week, it's doubling down on the Right to Life
Movement's long term commitment. We don't just work against to
defend innocent life "at the point of contact" through
legislative battles and elections. Ending abortion on demand and
ensuring adequate protections for innocent life that ultimately
require building a pro-life culture.
Might as well start with the kids
then. Here are a few notes and observations from the week.
A college professor of mine once
remarked to me that "teenagers want to be rebellious, so why not
make them rebellious for the right reasons?" While it's becoming
more and more common for our youngsters to be more pro-life by
inclination, the reigning cultural message from schools and
organizations is still that "choice" is ok. Take that teenage
impulse to contravene the dominant social message, and show them
how to defend innocent life with it.
Who says all kids today don't
care about learning? The kids recruited to Camp all showed an
enthusiasm and eagerness to learn, taking notes and asking
questions. I spent a couple evenings sitting around with them
discussing the political process, even while the evening
activity movie played in the background. After a full day's
routine of session after session, some of the kids still wanted
to know how a legislative alert can help influence legislators
on a critical vote.
The camp program is extremely
comprehensive. During the week virtually all topics relevant to
the pro-life movement were covered. Not just abortion and the
straightforward medical facts and statistics. Not just the legal
issues involved and the history of the pro-life movement. Not
just the current agenda of the pro-abortion administration in
Washington and the previous victories of the pro-life movement.
Not just introductions to euthanasia, assisted suicide, and
embryonic stem cell research.
All these were covered, and then
expanded upon, with sessions on the history of legalized
euthanasia in the Netherlands, comparisons to other social
movements in history, the connection between Margaret Sanger,
racism, eugenics, and the current culture of abortion on demand.
Covering all the life issues in this holistic fashion helps show
their interrelatedness, how easy it might be to go from being in
favor of eugenics, to favoring "choice" as birth control, to
wanting to disregard the elderly and disabled. Presenting the
entire picture rather than individual snapshots of issues helped
the kids better understand the underlying evil, and how to
better fight it.
Camp also equips kids to actively
combat the evils threatening innocent life. With sessions on the
importance of pro-life laws, on elections, on the priority of
educating those around us, the campers were given a full fledged
grounding in how to become the leaders of the next generation of
pro-lifers that we will need them to be.
And I just got to loaf around (Joleigh's
fantastic camp team ran the whole show effortlessly it seemed),
and feel encouraged about that next generation. A full week of
sessions, lectures, activities, and games for over two dozen
enthusiastic young teenagers--and me!
Please send all of your comments
to
daveandrusko@gmail.com. If you like, join those who are now
following me on Twitter at
http://twitter.com/daveha.
Part Three
Part Four
Part Five
Part One |