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NRL News
Page 9
June-July 2011
Volume 38
Issue 6-7
The First Place Winners
in the National Right to Life Pro-Life Essay Contest
Editor’s note. The
following essays were written for the National Right to Life
Pro-Life Essay Contest. Mariah Chiara Naegele won first place at the
senior level—grades 10–12—and Teresa Rose Sicree won first place at
the junior level—grades 7–9.
First Place Winner at the
Senior Level
“That Missing One
Fourth”
By Mariah Chiara Naegele, Alexandria, Virginia
Third period, one day last
October, I was staring around my English classroom, envisioning what
life would be like if a quarter of my classmates had never existed.
My soccer team would be missing some starters. The cafeteria and
hallways of my high school would be noticeably less crowded. Empty
desks would be a dominant feature in our classrooms. And what if my
best friend had never been born? It was that day when I suddenly
realized how many people are really missing.
Forty million babies have
been aborted since 1973, one in four pregnancies. The fact is, you
can throw around statistics all day, but if you don’t associate
numbers with individuals, it means nothing. Those “numbers” are kids
that would be our friends, in our classes, on our sports teams, at
our lunch tables, in the orthodontist waiting room, and on the honor
roll. These are kids who would grow up to be in every profession
they could dream of–doctors, NFL players, parents, engineers,
architects, teachers, coaches, PTA members, store clerks, priests,
truck rivers, dentists.
Abortion has impacted not
only my teenage life, but also my future. Everyday, there are
thousands of adults from the “baby-boomer” generation getting older.
A markedly smaller population, those born after the boom and after
Roe v. Wade, is growing up to pay for those adults’ social security
and medical care. How are we going to afford to provide for
ourselves and also provide for the elderly, whose numbers are so
much greater than our own? That is what my peers and I are
responsible for figuring out. Over-population is not a reality, it’s
a myth. We are actually going to have to struggle to compensate for
lack of population. That missing one fourth has a lot to do with it.
Abortion has also affected
the way we value human life. In the teenage world, pregnancy is not
seen as a beautiful gift, it is seen as something dirty and
embarrassing. Abortion is a way out, and is even considered the
loving option. On the surface, it spares the girl humiliation, and
it spares the baby growing up in a difficult situation. But you
can’t solve problems by creating larger ones. Abortions have serious
and painful complications on the mother’s health and psychological
condition. And as for the baby, you can’t even pretend that not
living at all is preferable to growing up in an imperfect family.
Every human person has a right to life, and everyone has the duty,
the obligation, to protect and preserve that right of others.
The bottom line is that my
generation is missing thousands of children due to the practice of
abortion. It has changed the way we view life, and lessened our
respect for the unborn and their mothers. It has impacted our world,
our communities, our families, and has contributed to a moral
degeneration across our culture. We need to stand for life, before
it’s too late. The time for life is now.
First Place Winner at the
Junior Level
“My Generation’s Black
Death”
By Teresa Rose Sicree, Boalsburg, PA
Empty seats are usually not
a sight anyone really wants to see. I graduated from eighth grade
with a class of nineteen in 2010 … we had a lot of empty seats. How
many more classmates would I have had if abortion had not been
legal?
In the year I was born,
1996, there were about 3,899,000 babies born; 1,360,160 more were
aborted. That means about thirty-five babies were aborted for every
one hundred born alive. If those babies had lived, I would have had
maybe six or seven more classmates. Alas, I am not the only one
missing friends: across our country there are about 1.4 million high
school freshmen that are missing. The world would be a different
place had they lived.
Abortion is the Black Death
of my generation. Back in medieval times the Black Death killed
about one third of the population of Europe. The same is true today,
with this “Red Death” of abortion. Close to 26 percent of my
generation were killed in 1996 by the Red Death. Known as the Black
Death, the bubonic plague had many effects on the lifestyle,
religion, and economics of the medieval people and changed their
society forever. Today, abortion also has untold effects on the
people of this country. Not only are the mother, father, and their
parents hurt by abortion, but everyone else is also hurt by the
decrease in population. To take an example, because of the babies
killed years ago, there are now not enough people to buy houses
today. Thus, the housing market slumps and our economy suffers.
How much good these babies
could have done if they had grown up is hard to measure. But we do
know this: that their books will never be written, their inventions
will never be built, and their love will never be shown … all
because they were killed in their mother’s womb.
There is a story that a
student asked Mother Teresa why God had not sent a person who would
cure AIDS. Mother Teresa is said to have answered: “Maybe God did,
but he was killed in his mother’s womb.” Abortionists might have
killed the person who would have found the cure to AIDS or cancer:
we will never know for sure. I do know for sure that they have
killed a quarter of my classmates, a quarter of my friends.
No matter what happens we
pro-lifers must never give up, never surrender. We must make sure
that there are no more empty seats. |