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NRL News
Page 11
November/December 2009
Volume 36
Issue 11-12
The
National Right to Life Academy: An Investment in the Future
By Megan McCrum
Don’t let the
snowflakes fool you, it is never too soon to start thinking about
summer. While many of us are wrapped up in Christmas preparations,
college students are beginning to ponder their summer plans: what
internship, course, or job will help them find their niche in the
world. For pro-life students the National Right to Life Academy may
be just the thing.
Since 2007 National
Right to Life has run an intensive summer course to train college
leaders to be more effective advocates for life. A comprehensive
curriculum examines the full range of life issues, from human
cloning to health care and denial of lifesaving medical treatment to
abortion. Over a six-week period academy students become well versed
to every threat to the dignity of human life, and become confident
advocates of truly life-affirming solutions.
And they are putting
what they learned to use. One academy graduate now serves as a
pro-life lobbyist for his home state’s NRLC affiliate where he puts
his skills from the academy to work on a daily basis. Another is
working toward becoming a nurse; she attended the academy in order
to equip herself to defend life in the medical field, which has
tragically forgotten its Hippocratic oath to preserve life and never
take it.
Some academy alumni
have come back to intern in the National Right to Life offices.
Tristen Cramer, a former academy student who spent the past summer
working on the academy staff, turned her pro-life passion into
action at Cornell University.
In the fall of 2008
the Cornell Coalition for Life was censored from displaying the
“Elena Campaign,” a series of light-hearted education signs with
pictures and text detailing the biological development of pre-born
babies threatened by abortion. Utilizing the training and tips she’d
learned at the academy, Tristen Cramer fired out a press release.
“It borders on the absurd that the facilities staff at the College
of Engineering finds photos depicting biological fetal development
to be controversial and offensive,” she wrote.
Pro-life students
such as Tristen and others come to the academy with a heartfelt
passion for defending the defenseless, and they leave with a
foundation of knowledge, professional skills, and sense of strategy
that amplifies their impact in the world. As one student said upon
finishing the academy course, “I have the same convictions that I
had before this summer but now I have all the information and
practice I need—the statistics, arguments, and speaking
techniques—to effectively articulate those convictions.”
The National Right to
Life Academy is a program that invests in the future. This summer’s
session runs June 23–August 6. Applications are due February 15. If
you are interested in learning more about the academy, go to our web
site at www.nrlc.org and click on the link for the academy or call
(202) 626-8822. |