Archbishop Dolan's
Remarks at Thursday's Chiaroscuro Foundation
Press Conference on Abortions in New York City
Part Two of Three
Editor's note. The
following are the remarks of Archbishop Timothy Dolan
who participated yesterday in a press conference held by
the Chiaroscuro Foundation at the Penn Club in New York
City. The Chiaroscuro Foundation is a non-profit
organization that supports alternatives to abortion.
I sure appreciate
the courtesy of being invited, and am honored to be in
such distinguished company for a noble cause about which
we are all very passionate.
Thanks,
journalists, for your interest.
For the first time
in my happy twenty-one months as a New Yorker, I am
embarrassed to be a member of a cherished community I
now -- -- usually with a lot of pride -- -- call home.
That 41% of New
York babies are aborted -- -- a percentage even higher
in the Bronx, and among our African-American babies in
the womb -- -- is downright chilling.
This New York
community is rightly celebrated for its warm welcome to
immigrants, for its hospitality, sense of embrace and
inclusion, and gritty sensitivity for those in need.
But we are
tragically letting down the tiniest, most fragile and
vulnerable: the little baby in the womb.
We have to do more
than shiver over these chilling statistics!
I invite all to
come together to make abortion rare, a goal even those
who work to expand the abortion license tell us they
share.
A quarter century
ago, Cardinal John O'Connor publicly stated: "Any woman
who is pregnant and in need can come to the Church and
we will help you," a pledge Cardinal Egan, and now I,
reaffirm. Through our Catholic charities, our adoption
services, our lobbying on behalf of pregnant women and
mothers of infants, our support for life-giving
alternatives to the decision all call tragic -- --
abortion, -- -- in our education of youth for healthy,
responsible, virtuous sexual behavior, our health care,
-- -- we have done our best to keep that promise, ...
and these haunting statistics only prod us to keep at
it.
Mother Teresa
remarked that the worst poverty was to take the life of
a baby so we could live, as we want. New York does not
deserve the gravestone,
"Abortion capital
of the world." Our boast is the Statue of Liberty, not
the "Grim Reaper."
Thanks for listening.
Part Three
Part One |