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Mary Ann Glendon:
The Heroine of the Notre Dame Commencement
Tragedy
Part Two of Three
Editor's note. The following are
the introductory remarks made by NRLC Vice
President Tony Lauinger prior to Prof. Mary Ann
Glendon receiving the Proudly Pro-Life Awards
Dinner October 6. We
are extremely privileged tonight to honor a very
special person. Named one of the "Fifty Most
Influential Women Lawyers in America," she is a
highly distinguished legal scholar, author, and
lecturer. She has traveled the world in the
furtherance of her devotion to both the learning
and the teaching of the law; she has, likewise,
traveled widely in selfless and dedicated
service to her Church, and in the promotion of
the pro-life values that she, and we, so deeply
cherish. She has been
accorded the high distinction of receiving
honorary degrees from universities both in our
country and abroad. She traveled to China as
head of the Holy See's delegation to the United
Nations Women's Conference.
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Prof. Mary Ann
Glendon (center), the recipient of
the
2009 Proudly Pro-Life Award, with
NRLC President Dr. Wanda Franz and
NRLC Vice President Tony Lauinger. |
During the George W. Bush
Administration she traveled to Vatican City to
represent our nation as Ambassador to the Holy
See. She traveled here tonight from Boston,
where she is the Learned Hand Professor of Law
at Harvard University.
In a lifetime of scholarship and service, Mary
Ann Glendon has done much. She has traveled
much. But it is primarily for something she
declined to do, and for a trip she did not take,
that we honor her here tonight--a trip that she
declined to take to a small city on the plains
of Indiana that is home to our nation's
best-known Catholic university.
Mary Ann Glendon had been invited
to receive what is arguably the most prestigious
worldly honor an American Catholic can
receive--Notre Dame's Laetare Medal. What
initially she had so anticipated and treasured,
became, instead--due to a drastic change of
circumstances--something very different. Because
months after inviting her to attend the
commencement to receive the Laetare Medal, Notre
Dame invited Barack Obama to receive an honorary
degree at the same event.
Sadly, the honor which was to
be conferred on her began being portrayed as
part of a convoluted balancing act by the Notre
Dame administration to justify their decision to
honor the most aggressively pro-abortion
president in our nation's history. Mary Ann
Glendon was unwillingly being put in an
untenable position. And so she withdrew from the
commencement and declined the Notre Dame honor.
There is an old saying for which,
I would submit, Mary Ann Glendon has given us a
new adaptation: "A conscience is a terrible
thing to waste." For it
was, no doubt, the conscience of this courageous
woman that led her to renounce the pomp of the
Notre Dame commencement. And it was her
principled refusal, her conspicuous absence, her
silent witness to the dehumanized, discarded,
dismembered unborn children of our throw-away
society that made Mary Ann Glendon the heroine
of the Notre Dame commencement tragedy.
Many were willing to overlook the
pro-abortion policies of Barack Obama in
exchange for the pageantry of a presidential
visit. Many were enthralled by the excitement of
such a prospect and put aside their moral
reservations. It took Mary Ann Glendon--a
layperson, a wife, a mother--to put the whole
sad spectacle in perspective. With crystal
clarity, she showed us what the priority ought
to be: fidelity to the Truth, and to the
sanctity of innocent human life.
My wife Phyllis and I have been
blessed with eight children. We entrusted each
of our children to Notre Dame--Notre Dame, Our
Mother, and Notre Dame, the institution. We were
disillusioned by the institution's failure to
reflect the values of its namesake, but our
faith was fortified during those dark days this
spring by the quiet strength, uncommon courage,
and edifying example of this inspiring,
selfless, solitary individual, Mary Ann Glendon.
It had to be distressing to her
to see the excuses offered by the university in
its own defense. She must have lamented the
nation's leading Catholic university circling
the wagons--not to defend the university from
the secular culture, but to defend the
university's administration from pro-life
students, faculty, alumni and parents.
Mary Ann Glendon did not seek out
a university committee, a board of trustees, or
a faculty senate to tell her what was right. A
lifetime of faithfulness to the Truth had
conditioned her moral compass. And she obviously
had taken to heart the words of Abraham Lincoln:
"It is a sin to be silent when it is your duty
to protest." Mary Ann Glendon had the humility,
and the humanity, to heed her conscience, and
the integrity and strength of character to do
what was right.
Recognizing that fifty million unborn children
killed since Roe v. Wade is an abomination
beyond comprehension, Mary Ann Glendon was not
willing to run the risk that even one young
woman might infer from her participation in the
commencement that she condoned the policies that
were the cause of the controversy.
It was St. Ambrose who taught us:
"Not only for every idle word, but for every
idle silence, must man render an account." Mary
Ann Glendon can look forward to the day when she
gives an accounting of her faithfulness to that
ultimate little masterpiece of God's creation,
the helpless, innocent, defenseless child
waiting to be born.
Part Three
Part One |