Students March for Life

January 31, 2013



Just before sunrise on Friday, January 25, a packed bus departed St. John’s Queens, NY, campus bound for Washington, DC, to join nearly half-a-million people in the 40th Annual March for Life. Held every year at this time, the march draws attention to the 1973 decision of the Supreme Court to legalize abortion in the Roe vs. Wade case and rallies to overturn it.

The group of 43 St. John’s students headed to the National Mall to hear senators and members of Congress speak out for the unborn and the protection of life. Rick Santorum, the former presidential candidate who served as senator from Pennsylvania, addressed the crowd, offering words of affirmation and encouragement to all gathered. “You are the voice for the voiceless, you are those who stand for love in a world of death, and we are proud to stand here with you,” he said. “One day we will stand here in triumph, because love and truth always triumph.”

The cold couldn’t dampen the spirits of the marchers, of which half were made up of young people. James Finnegan ’13MS, a St. John’s graduate student and former president of Students for Life, was thrilled at the opportunity to have one of the largest delegations in the University’s history come together to connect and share their beliefs as a community and on the national stage. “This is very much a day of prayer and remembrance,” Finnegan said. “This is a movement about changing hearts and minds.”

When the speeches concluded, the St. John’s students and more than 500,000 fellow defenders of life descended on Capitol Hill. While solemn prayer echoed through the crowds, the cheering and singing of youth and adults alike resounded throughout Constitution Avenue in fervent support of life at any stage. “The best way to combat a culture of death is with the celebration of life,” said Andrew Scott, Campus Minister for Spirituality.

The day concluded with Mass at the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception. Scott remarked that the liturgy was the perfect way to end the day. “After a day of activism, we must bring it back to prayer,” he said. “With the present day pro-life issues, prayer is perhaps the most important thing we can do.”