Daily
Vanguard
Anti-abortion
activists visit PSU
California-based group makes Park Blocks stop
Jacob Fenton photos by Jordan
Froblom
April 30, 2003
Anti-abortion activists held signs in the park blocks yesterday
comparing abortion in America to the Holocaust.
The protest fell on Yom Hashoah, Holocaust Remembrance Day.
The day of observance is not a religious holiday, but corresponds to
the day of the Hebrew calendar on which Israel commemorates the victims
of the Holocaust.
The timing of the protest was "in extremely bad taste," said Sam
Falk, a senior French and International Affairs major who is Jewish.
"Fundamentalists always try to make comparisons to the Holocaust to
support their cause, and end up doing the exact opposite," said Falk.
The protestors seemed unaware of the day of remembrance. Jonathon
O'Toole, a member of the California-based Survivors of the Abortion
Holocaust, said he "hoped" the timing wouldn't be offensive.
The anti-abortion activists also held signs depicting
larger-than-life aborted fetuses.
Alecia McCullough, a protester who said she was 25 weeks pregnant
with her second child, said the signs were necessary to reach people.
McCullough's first child, Anthony, was conceived when she was raped
at the age of 14, she said. "I'm thankful that I didn't go in and have
an abortion."
However, many were disturbed by the images.
"It's very powerful, but it's very gruesome," said freshman
communications major Jessica Johnston. "It gets their point across, but
I don't think it's the right way to do it."
"Choosing to have an abortion is already a stressful and emotional
decision," said Aimee Shattuck, director of the Women's Resource Center
in an email, "women do not deserve to be equated with Hitler and
lynchers."
Shattuck said the energy of those who disagree with the legal right
to abortion might be better spent helping to "provide adequate resources
for women and families, including jobs, health care, childcare, food,
and housing."
"The format [of the protest] does not do the issue justice," said
Chris Laing, a Lutheran Episcopal pastor who works at PSU's campus
ministries. In Laing's opinion, the displays "exhibited poor taste and
spurious reasoning."
Lori O'Connor, a junior English major who opposes abortion, found the
protest effective. "I know if I was on the other side, it would affect
me," she said. O'Connor also praised the protestors for their
non-confrontational tactics. "It's cool they're not yelling at people."
In all, 10 anti-abortion activists held signs and passed out
literature. The group is supported by private donations, said Eric
Milton, a protestor who has been on tour with Survivors of the Abortion
Holocaust full-time for nine months.
Many of the images of fetuses were from a procedure called "partial
birth abortion," said Milton. "It's a pretty rare procedure," he said. 