When the Educated Become Educators and
Inspire Others
Part Two of Two
By Joleigh Little, Wisconsin Teens for Life Director
It's pretty amazing, really! One
passionate pro-life teenager can have a huge impact on the world around her
and even on future generations.
Let me give you an example--and keep
in mind that this potential exists every time we train a young person and
give him or her an opportunity to fall in love with our cause.
Rachel Schumacher, our new Wisconsin
Teens for Life (WTL) president, is 15 years old. She has mad organizational
skills, a fabulous sense of humor, and a level of maturity that is beyond
her years. Other teens are drawn to her, but it's more than her wit and
friendliness that draws them.
To put it simply, this kid knows her
stuff.
Rachel is the younger sister of past
WTL president Bethany Schumacher, who took the time to educate her about the
cause of life. Bethany brought Rachel to her first Wisconsin Right to Life
camp when Rachel was 13 years old. Two years later Rachel was on the
leadership team (along with Bethany) and this fall she became our youngest
WTL president ever.
She was chosen for this role because
she exemplifies what it means to be a teen in the right-to-life movement.
She is savvy. She not only learns what
she is taught, she also internalizes it and finds ways to explain it to her
peers that will help them better understand the issue.
She is passionate. After a devotion at
one of this summer's camps she passed the speaker a little note. It was a
prayer she had written out, pledging to spend her life--as long as it
takes--telling people exactly why abortion and euthanasia are wrong and
challenging them to speak out.
She is compassionate. She understands
that abortion is wrong because it kills children and because it hurts women.
She never loses sight of the fact that every abortion has multiple victims.
She is a go-to kind of girl. If it
needs to get done, you give it to Rachel. It will get done, it will get done
well, and somehow she will manage to do it while juggling school, Driver's
Ed, religion classes, running her local Teens for Life group, and taking
time out to play with her little sisters.
In the eight months that she has been
on our team, Rachel has spoken in front of teen groups, written articles,
engaged in some amazing discussions about abortion with peers on Facebook,
taken the issue to her school, and participated in national-level events.
She helps plan all of our teen events on the state level and her input is
valued every bit as highly as that of any adult.
Anyone who knows her will tell you
that Rachel is unique, amazing, fabulous, and delightful. But here's the
best news ...
There are other Rachels out there in
every state of the union. They have different names and faces, different
sets of talents, sure, but all with one thing in common: they care about
life and are willing to speak up to defend it.
All it takes from us is a little time
and effort to identify and train them--then watch as what you have invested
in them snowballs and impacts more and more lives. One life truly can
change--and save--many, many others.
This rings especially true in Rachel's
case because, you see, her involvement didn't start with her older sister,
Bethany ... it actually started even further back when a few girls started a
pro-life group at their Catholic school when Rachel was only seven. One of
them was Amanda McClone, who you will, no doubt, remember from countless
previous NRL News articles.
The other was a girl named Maria.
Maria would have been in college now, had she not died in a car accident
when she was 14.
Maria was Bethany and Rachel's older
sister. When she died, Bethany inherited her collection of pro-life t-shirts
and, it turns out, her passion for ending abortion. It is a mantle that
Bethany has passed on to Rachel, and Rachel is working to pass on to the
rest of the Schumacher brood. (Emma, at nine, is already clamoring to attend
Teens for Life camp.)
Just as every life for which we fight
is precious, unique, and valuable, every teen we train is all of those
things, too. And every single one of them has the potential, like Rachel,
Bethany, Amanda, and Maria, to reach many, many others and inspire in them a
passion for life.
When I asked Amanda (who is also my
assistant) for a few specifics about Maria, she mentioned that she and a
friend had just been talking about how many people are involved in the fight
for life because of Maria's example. Not the least of whom is her little
sister, Rachel, who will be doing great things for the cause of life for
years and decades to come.
For more information on how you can
involve youth in the right-to-life movement, contact us at
jlittle@wrtl.org.
Part One |