The
Worst of Days, The Best of Days
Inclement weather at World
Youth for Life Day cannot squelch message of hope
By Natalie Hudson
The
sky had turned a steely grey and gusts of wind lashed the trees
and the stage where the banners "Let Them Live" and "World Youth
for Life" hung. From the back of the large green field, bodies could
be seen dashing to and fro. Some ran for the cover of the trees,
some ran across the quaint little bridge and disappeared among the
booths on Center Island. Others were trying to cover up their tables.
Boxes of books by author Bud Macfarlane Jr. were stowed away under
the main stage and the optimistic voice of MC Kevin Dunn rang out,
"Well folks, looks like we are in for a bit of a shower, but don't
go away! We have a great evening in store for you."
Participants of World Youth
for Life huddled under the awnings of the booths in the amusement
park on Center Island as the rain poured down and the heavens boomed.
They sang hymns and joyfully prayed the Rosary, astonishing the
regular folk who had come to the Island for a day of relaxation.
Rabbi Yehuda Levin had
just arrived from New York to Olympic Island moments before the
storm struck. He was now seated in a SUV with Dr. Dolores Bernadette
Grier, Camille De Blasi (Executive Director of Life Principles),
and John Adams (owner of Integrity Communications Group). As rain
pelted the roof and great puddles formed in front of the stage,
it looked as if the Rabbi would not address the youth. Reluctantly,
the speakers were taken to a restaurant called Paradise Island,
beside the ferry dock, so that they could dry off and have a hot
cup of tea.
However, much to the surprise
of the organizers, over one hundred young folks with Pro-Life
screened in enormous letters on their t-shirts were shivering
in a large covered enclosure in the eatery, waiting for the storm
to subside. Word was quickly sent out to the other pilgrims who
were still being battered by the storm. Within moments, the deck
was jammed with over three hundred souls. With nothing to amplify
his voice but his powerful presence, Rabbi Levin riveted everyone
with the most exciting exhortation of the day. His message: Self
Control - the critical need to order and channel passions so that
we can be free to live a life which dignifies us as human beings.
Chanda Gibson and her troupe
of exceptionally talented Irish dancers followed, and soon the rafters
shook with applause as Irish tunes reverberated and her troupe tapped
and jigged. After so many inclement hours, the excitement was building.
The remarkable Camille De Blasi topped it all with a message of
hope in the face of suffering.
Elated, the pilgrims poured
out of the upper room to be welcomed by the Celtic tunes of aptly
named Ceili Rain, who were scheduled to have played that evening.
No big stage, no amps or speakers, Ceili Rain was electric. Now
everyone was a child again, no matter what age, clapping and dancing.
Joy seemed to be everywhere!
The big day ended with
a satisfying thunder of the soul, perhaps according to the loving
plans of Providence, if not the organizers. Weary, damp, yet with
grins from ear to ear, the participants of World Youth for Life
Day ferried back to Toronto with changed hearts, in love with life.
The entire day had not
been overshadowed by storm clouds. The morning was sunny, though
bracingly humid, and the "pre-storm" high point was Senator Rick
Santorum (Republican, PA). The Sisters for Life from New York and
various news agencies greeted him. In blazing heat he gave an impassioned
speech, moving the crowd to tears.
"You cannot check your
beliefs at the door." The Senator's message: private beliefs cannot
be separated from public behavior, especially when human
life is at stake.
These days "tolerance"
means allowing people to do whatever they want. Santorum admitted
that he had begun his career woefully short on the courage of his
convictions. During his 1990 run for office, he was forced to take
a position on abortion. But it wasn't until 1996, while watching
a presentation in the Senate on partial-birth abortion, that he
took action. He was appalled that such blatant infanticide was legal.
When then President Clinton vetoed a ban on the practice, the Senator
initiated the movement to override the veto.
Senator Santorum implored
our youngest citizens to start a counter-revolution, to overturn
the Sexual Revolution of the Sixties and its bloody wake of death
through abortion. He called for a youth movement to reclaim the
sanctity of marriage, the importance of motherhood, the beauty of
abstinence, and most critically, to fight and win the battle against
abortion.
No heart was left untouched
when the senator from Pennsylvania lowered his voice and related
how, a mere week after the Senate failed to override Clinton's veto,
Senator Santorum and his wife were suffering through their own desperate
struggle to save the life of his 20-week-old son, Gabriel Michael.
Their son survived for two hours in his father's arms, enough time
for Rick to baptize him. "You have a son in heaven," a friend tried
to console him. To come to terms with her newborn's death, Mrs.
Santorum wrote letters to her son. These were eventually published
in a book, Letters to Gabriel, and have sold over 20,000
copies. They have inspired numerous parents to reject abortion and
choose life for their sons and daughters. "God was faithful," the
senator said, his voice cracking, "and brought life out of death."
The Santorums had been given a gift greater than they ever expected.
Through the loss of their beloved son, thousands of parents who
would have otherwise chosen abortion, were lead to life. "Have the
courage of your convictions.if you do the will of God, He will be
faithful."
Winds blow. Storms bellow.
Rain scatters and tempts despair. The lesson of World Youth for
Life Day is that the truth - the truth about life, the truth about
hope, the truth about persistence in the face of all obstacles and
against all odds - will triumph in the end, bringing joy, music,
light, and change. Change that must come, and will come.?
Natalie Hudson is Executive
Director of Right to Life Association of Toronto and Area which
organized World Youth for Life Day.
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