Jane Roe heads No More Roe By Uwe Siemon-Netto UPI Religion Correspondent Volume 34, Number 2 Posted March 26, 2001 NEW YORK No More Roe is the name of a Catholic pro-life ministry trying to dissuade pregnant women from having an abortion. And guess who is heading this Dallas-based group? None other than Norma McCorvey, 53, otherwise known as Jane Roe. It was under this legal guise that she won the U.S. Supreme Courts landmark decision legalizing abortion exactly 28 years ago. Her adversary was Henry Wade, then district attorney of Dallas, who died recently at 86. Ironically, Norma McCorvey never had an abortion herself. Once a self-described lesbian activist, she nevertheless carried three pregnancies to term, including the one that was the object of Roe v. Wade. It had been, she once said, the result of a fleeting affair. In the end, Norma McCorvey gave her children up for adoption. And this is one alternative to abortion that No More Roe is promoting. We also direct callers from around the country to pro-life counselors near their home towns, Connie Gonzalez, one of McCorveys three volunteers, told United Press International. Louisiana-born McCorvey now says I think we all have the same dream: Wed like to see Roe v. Wade overturned. To get to this point, McCorvey has traveled a tortuous journey. She spent much of her childhood in reform schools. I ran away from home when I was ten, and spent several decades supporting myself with odd jobs a carnival barker, a waitress, a bartender, cleaning apartments, construction work, she wrote in an article for her own Web site. In the end, she wound up working for a Dallas abortion clinic where callers critical of the clinics business showered her with unprintable insults, Texas Monthly magazine reported in 1995. Would you like to see how we murder babies? she would say. Why dont you bring your embryos along? Well kill them, too. Perhaps her first doubts about her role in opening the floodgates to the termination of up to 1.5 million unborn babies per year in the United States came when she passed an empty playground. There were all those swings swinging by themselves in the wind, and there was not a child in sight. And I said to myself, Oh, my God, these playgrounds are empty because all the children have been aborted. Then something curious happened. The Rev. Philip Flip Benham, leader of Operation Rescue, moved into an office next door to the abortion clinic where McCorvey worked. Until then, McCorvey had called this brash cleric Flip Venom, and he had accused her of being responsible for the deaths of 35 million children, McCorvey wrote. Slowly, the two office workers who were supposed to be enemies became friends. But it was Emily, the 7 year old daughter of Operation Rescue volunteer Ronda Mackey, whose love really triggered McCorveys conversion. Ronda Mackeys car carried a bumper sticker with a vivid red heart on the side. It read, Abortion Stops a Beating Heart. Less than a year after Pastor Benham had moved his office next to Norma McCorvey, he baptized her in a swimming pool. Later she joined the Catholic Church. |
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