By Micaiah Bilger, Education Director
Pennsylvania Pro-Life Federation
While Hannah
was still in the womb, doctors diagnosed her with Trisomy 18, a
chromosomal abnormality that causes most babies to die at birth.
Doctors
encouraged Hannah's mother, Bernadette, to abort her. They said
Bernadette's seven other children would suffer while she was confined to
a hospital bed with a high risk pregnancy, but she and her husband
refused to kill Hannah in the womb.
Instead,
they hoped and prayed. Hannah was born, not without problems, but she
lived. Hannah spent a remarkable five years with her family before she
died.
Her
mother said, "Five beautiful years with her. I just want to tell
mothers, 'Don't do this [abortion].' I had to fight through it all. I
wanted my baby alive and I wanted to carry her. We would have missed out on all of the beauty of life with my daughter."
So
many babies like Hannah are labeled "incompatible with life" and
routinely aborted. Abortion advocates wrongly persuade these worried
parents that the compassionate thing to do is have an abortion.
As
I read Hannah's story, I thought about what would have happened if she
had been aborted. I thought about the parents in similar situations who
do abort.
And
I realized how abortion takes miracles out of the equation: no miracles
for a baby diagnosed with a fatal illness, no hope for a family facing
terrifying news about their baby.
Then
I look at the pro-life movement, and I see the person-against-the-odds
stories that we can't help but love. I see people refusing to allow even
the darkest circumstances overshadow the innate value of every human
life.
It may be a simple thought, but I find comfort and joy in realizing that we are a movement of hope and miracles.
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