A top Vatican official on life issues called the protests sweeping
across the U.S. this week against abortion a historic witness to the
sanctity of human life.
“These marches for life that are taking place across the United States
are very important, not only for the country, but for the whole world,”
Bishop Carrasco de Paula, head of the Pontifical Academy for Life, told
CNA Jan. 23.
“These events which favor human life without limits, from conception
until the end, have become a very important historical reference for all
other Catholic countries worldwide,” he added.
“And if we talk about the Vatican as another face of the Church, then
we can say the Church supports these marches in the whole world because
the participants are the Church themselves.”
From coast to coast, pro-life marches and rallies in America continue
to mark the week of Jan. 22 as the 40th anniversary of Roe v. Wade – the
Supreme Court decision that effectively legalized abortion throughout
the nation.
According to the the 75-year-old bishop, the Vatican aims to help those
that are on the front lines of the cultural battle to defend life. The
Holy See “is well aware that these actions have become very visible in
the world, especially in the United States,” he said.
The Pontifical Academy for Life will be holding its annual assembly
next month, where all its members from abroad will meet in Rome. The
annual meeting features guest speakers and this year's theme will be on
“faith and human life.”
“Our talk will relate to this because it'll cover not only the defense
of human life, but love for human life,” said Bishop de Paula, who has
served the academy since 1994 and was appointed by Pope Benedict as its
president in 2010.
“Life is worth living and there are a lot of people who need to be told that.”
Despite the devastation of 40 years of legalized abortion in the U.S.,
he noted, it has also helped raise awareness on the value of human life.
“Many women have reacted by rebelling...saying they don't accept this
and they want to do what is possible to change with, of course, specific
means,” he added. “I really believe that, like slavery, we will be able
to eradicate abortion eventually.”
At the same time, he qualified, abortion legalization has had a profoundly negative impact on the social value of maternity.
“Abortion doesn't help women when they are in need of most support and
then it becomes a fountain of interior suffering,” he added. “We've been
created by God to be happy and what abortion does is simply the
opposite.”
The Academy for Life has studied in-depth the trauma that abortion can cause in women, often many years after the procedure.
“The consequences include a very large umbrella with a minority of
women who hardly notice they've had an abortion and others who develop
serious disorders,” said the former director of the Bioethics Institute
of the University of the Sacred Heart in Rome.
“Women can have anxiety neurosis, depression and even more serious
disorders, especially with personalities with a predisposition to a
psychotic disorder,” he added.
Women who undergo abortions are themselves a victim, especially when
doctors advise them to undergo an abortion, he said. “Sometimes women
are just not able to defend themselves from certain situations.”