From Youth Pro-Life Activist to
Congressman
-- Part One of Two
By Rep. Chris Smith
Editor's note. Co-chairman of the bipartisan Congressional pro-life
caucus, Congressman Chris Smith is a genuine pro-life hero. He will be
delivering the opening remarks to the National Teens for Life Convention
which runs parallel to the NRLC convention which takes place July 3-5.
The following is an article he wrote for the January 2007 edition of
National Right to Life News. I hope you enjoy it as much as I do. Please
also check out Part Two--"Interesting
Studies From Gallup."
Over the past 27 years of service
in the U.S. House of Representatives I have given thousands of speeches.
Some of them are memorable, owing more to the setting than contents--the
Vatican, the Kremlin, the United Nations--but the one speech I remember
best was the first pro-life speech I researched and gave in one of my
college classes.
That one speech and surrounding
reactions set the course for my entire future, including who I would
marry and what career path I would follow.
In that speech, I told my
classmates that to me, abortion methods looked like child abuse. I
explained that there were positive nonviolent alternatives to an
unexpected pregnancy offered by groups such as Birthright. I relayed my
dismay at the callousness of one abortionist I had read about who was
"upset" that a late-term abortion he performed had "survived"--the
"dreaded complication"--a living baby.
You would have thought I had
committed the unpardonable sin.
No less than three classmates
wrote and delivered stridently harsh rebuttal speeches. I had challenged
what I truly believed to be an insidious injustice, a raft of junk
science routinely employed to prop up abortion rights and what I
generally regarded as surface appeal arguments that could not survive
any serious scrutiny. In response, they attacked me.
As I sat in that classroom, I felt
an overwhelming sense of empathy and sorrow for the helpless unborn
child, who unlike me had no way of defending himself or herself against
such violent prejudice. I also felt bad for young, pregnant women who
were being sold a pack of lies. And I was stunned by the personal
animus--and that condescending look every pro-lifer knows and has likely
experienced.
It was a moment of truth for
me--fight, flight, or choose the safe environs of indifference or
nonchalance. I chose to fight.
At Trenton State College (now the
College of New Jersey), I teamed up with another student and good
friend--Marty Dannenfelser--and together we launched the TSC Pro-Life
Committee as part of the National Youth Pro-Life Coalition. As it turned
out, our first speaker, Alda Atkinson, gave an extraordinarily powerful
and informative presentation replete with Dr. Willke's slides of fetal
development and actual abortions, an event that clinched the deal as to
my total commitment. Our primary mission--which remains a core mission
of today's collegians for life--was to educate and help mothers at risk.
A short time later, I met a
similarly committed, smart, and attractive young woman named Marie who
became president of the committee and, I'm thrilled to say, went on to
marry me. (We will celebrate our 30th wedding anniversary next July.)
Throughout the 70s I served as
state youth pro-life coordinator, as well as legislative director and
executive director of the New Jersey Right to Life Committee. As we
fought the good fight in the 70s, it became apparent that the high bar
of overturning a Supreme Court decision coupled with overt complicity of
the media with our adversaries made success--any success--difficult.
And as I discovered, this
particular fight was like no other. It requires giving the cause total
commitment while cultivating prudence and patience for the long haul.
This fight would not be won overnight. It requires deep love not just
for the oppressed but the oppressors as well. As people of faith, we
must do no less.
It requires sustained compassion,
courage, persistence, and abiding hope regardless of success or failure
or anything in between. It requires good science, sound strategy, and
disciplined tactics.
It requires telling the truth
despite the fact that the other side distorts, manipulates, and "lies
through their teeth" to quote one pro-abortion leader. (Hey, if they can
kill babies, what's a lie?) And it requires prayer--tons of prayer and
sacrifice and even fasting.
I also discovered I had joined a
group of remarkable pro-life people who were clearly the most selfless,
compassionate, and generous people on earth, the modern-day
abolitionists, who like the anti-slavery crusaders of old, fought for
justice and for the weak, vulnerable, and disenfranchised regardless of
the personal cost. Often they opened their homes and wallets to
personally aid those in need.
In the early years of the pro-life
movement, it didn't take long to realize the importance of both
legislative action and involvement in political campaigns if we were to
protect unborn children from the clutches of the abortionists. This fact
is no less true today. Policies are developed and enacted in the
legislative arena. For me, that was and is where the fight has to be
engaged.
In 1976, at the age of 23, I
served as campaign manager for a U.S. Senate primary candidate. We were
crushed. Two years later, I was back, running for a congressional seat.
I too was crushed at the polls. (But so was another congressional
candidate, one from Texas named George W. Bush.)
Two years later in 1980 I tried
again and won a congressional seat. And this past November was reelected
for a 14th consecutive term.
In Congress I poured myself into a
myriad of human rights and humanitarian concerns, including authoring
laws to protect women from sex traffickers, help children with autism,
secure health care and benefits for veterans and/or their survivors, end
religious persecution, aid torture victims, and promote the rule of just
law. At the core of all human rights protection is the right to life for
all regardless of age, race, condition of dependency or disability, or
stage of development. The right to life of the unborn is the first human
right.
In recent years, modern medicine
and scientific breakthroughs have shattered the myth that unborn
children are not human persons or alive. Today, ultrasound technologies
and other diagnostic tools have helped doctors to diagnose illness and
disability before birth.
New and exciting breakthrough
health care intervention for the unborn--including microsurgeries--are
leading to an ever expanding array of successful treatments and cures of
sick or disabled unborn babies in need of help.
In stark contrast, abortion
methods rip, tear, and dismember, or chemically poison the fragile
bodies of unborn children. There is nothing whatsoever benign,
compassionate, or just about an act that utterly destroys the life of a
baby and often physically, psychologically, or emotionally harms the
woman.
Abortion is a violation of
fundamental human rights and should be treated as such. Actions by
groups such as Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch to advocate
in favor of abortion as a "human right" does grave disservice to real
human rights abuses and calls into question the integrity of these
organizations. They--like us--have a duty to protect everyone at risk,
not just the planned, the privileged, and the perfect.
Despite pro-life victories over
the years such as proscribing public funding for abortion, the ban on
partial-birth abortion, and the enactment of numerous informed consent
laws in several states, the durable protection we seek remains elusive.
And with the recent flip of
leadership in Congress, our challenge to preserve our gains--most of
which need to be renewed annually as riders to appropriation
bills--presents serious challenges and struggles over policy and
funding.
As Republican Chair of the House
Pro-Life Caucus, I know the present challenge is great. But many
pro-lifers in Congress will fight hard to defend life.
We will use every legitimate means
available to protect the innocent. To stop anti-life legislation that
subsidizes embryonic stem cell research with federal funds, for example,
we will have to count on President Bush's veto and the votes to sustain
his veto.
We've been here before. Many of us are battle tested.
It was worse in 1992. Bill
Clinton's party controlled everything and aggressively touted the
"Freedom of Choice Act," a bill designed to codify a policy that went
well beyond Roe v. Wade. He and his wife pushed an absolute mandate for
abortion in universal health coverage.
Clinton sought the nullification
of all pro-life riders. He unilaterally overturned numerous pro-life
policies by executive order and greased the skids for RU486.
Then--as now--we were unshaken in
our resolve to meet any and all challenges. In the end, the Abortion
President--Bill Clinton--did enormous damage both here and abroad. But
the outcomes of his anti-life initiatives could have been much worse.
Today we can be truly grateful that a courageous pro-life president
occupies the White House.
Still, this new session of
Congress ought to be viewed as a serious wake-up call to men and women
who cherish life to consider service in public office. Few occupations
offer such a direct way to shape the policies of a nation and of a
world. Congress--and our state legislatures--need men and women who are
bold, courageous, and unwavering in their defense of life.
To the young especially, the
pro-life movement absolutely needs your enthusiasm, idealism, ideas, and
hope. We need your vision and leadership. We need your faith in action.
I fervently hope and pray that
more of you will heed the call to a life in whole or in part in
politics--as staff or elected representatives. Heed the call, we need
you now.
Please check out Part Two--Interesting Studies From Gallup