Washington D.C., Jan 20, 2024 / 06:00 am
More than 500 pilgrims from the Archdiocese of Boston traveled to the March for Life this year in Washington, D.C.
Some traveled by train, others by bus or plane, and some drove “all through the night” just to get to the march, Colleen Donohoe, associate superintendent of Catholic identity with Boston Catholic Schools, told CNA on Friday.
The group marched under the Archdiocese of Boston’s large yellow and blue “Witness to Life” banner with their archbishop, Cardinal Sean O’Malley. Several seminarians, priests, young adults, elementary-aged students, and older adults accompanied the group.
Donohoe said that despite the difficult logistics involved in coordinating all the Boston pilgrims, the trip was worth it.
“I’m the youngest of seven children. I have a giant extended family, and we just always knew that this is what is most important in life: to pray for and defend the lives of our preborn brothers and sisters because they are worth it. We’re all worth it,” she said.
Father Ed Riley, pastor of Sacred Heart Parish in Waltham, Massachusetts, said that it’s important to be in Washington, D.C., marching for life.
“We want to witness as much as we can with joy, prayer, and presence,” Riley said, adding that it’s just as important to witness in the state of Massachusetts.
Riley, who traveled to Washington with a group of seventh-grade students from St. Michael School in Lowell, Massachusetts, and members of the school’s staff, said he’s advocated for the kids to come to the capital to experience “a bit of a history lesson” on the nation “as a country for life and the protection of life.”
“So this is not a one-off Catholic issue. It’s not just a bunch of Christians coming down and saying, ‘Okay, we’re going to force this issue.’ This is the foundation of the documents and the fathers and the men and women who built this nation hundreds of years ago. And our kids are being exposed to that history and that truth,” he said.
Dina Sophia Patryn, 22, of Weymouth, Massachusetts, and Kaycie Hippolyte, 25, of Boston, traveled to the march by bus and didn’t arrive in Washington until 1 a.m. on Friday.
“I was able to sleep most of the time,” Hippolyte said.
“There were some accidents on the road and that was kind of scary, but it was a long way,” Patryn added.
Both said the long trek was “absolutely” worth it.
“We were all born in the womb and life is precious. And it’s not something that you can choose, it’s something that God has given. And no matter what label people like to put it, all forms of a human life is life. And it’s sacred,” Hippolyte said.
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