40 Days for Life — Week 1

“It’s a crazy world we live in . . .  but some seem to know how to see the good in it.”

This is from a message that was left at a 40 Days for Life vigil site (not Rockland). It was addressed “To the Sign People.” And it was from a  woman who had been planning to have an abortion – – until she saw the “ordinary” people who were showing up every day at the clinic holding their signs.

 
If you’re not sure whether peaceful witness outside abortion centers makes a difference, please read “To the Sign People.”
 

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Please join us the prayer site on Perlman Drive in Spring Valley at any time from 9 am to 6 pm. If you can make a commitment of one hour per week, please email rachelminister1@aol.com or call 845-492-6709.

Prayer continues overnight at the Perpetual Eucharistic Adoration Chapel at St. Gregory Barbarigo Church on Cinder Road in Garnerville. The 40 Days for Life runs through Nov. 3.

In Memory of John J. Davidson, 40 Days of Life Supporter

Be Part of the Life Chain — Sunday, Oct. 6

The 21st annual Rockland Life Chain will take place on Sunday, Oct. 6, from 2 to 3:30 at the intersection of Route 59 and Middletown Road in Nanuet.

The Life Chain is a peaceful, prayerful public witness of prolife individuals praying for our nation and for an end to abortion. This year it is being held in memory of the late John Davidson, of Congers, a longtime defender of the right to life.  John passed away on June 16, 2013.

IN MEMORY OF JOHN J. DAVIDSON — DEVOTED TO GOD, FAMILY, and COUNTRY

John Davidson

John praying the Rosary at the 40 Days for Life.

John was a regular with the Our Lady of Guadalupe Rosarians, who pray every Saturday morning at 11 a.m. year round outside the Planned Parenthood office in Spring Valley.

Also, for six years — from the fall of 2007 until the spring of 2013 —  he participated in the 40 Days for Life, taking numerous hours fasting and praying to end abortion.

John was born in October 1933, in the heart of the Depression. He experienced  hard times. His father, out of work and ill, became hospitalized for tuberculosis, and his mother, Josephine O’Leary Davidson, became the breadwinner. With an outstanding score on the Civil Service Exam she landed a job of toll collector on the George Washington Bridge. She worked there until the end of World War II and then obtained a permanent position with the New York City Transit Authority.

Determined to meet the challenges he had to face, John took to education like a duck to water. He graduated from Sacred Heart grammar school in 1947, and his hard work paid off with a bachelor’s degree from Manhattan College in 1975, a master’s degree in English from Fordham University, a PhD in Administration from St. John’s University, and a JD from Pace University Law School in 1982. He was admitted to the bar in 1985.

In 1956 John’s  education was interrupted when he was drafted into the Army, where he served as a paratrooper. He later joined the Army Reserves as a second lieutenant and advanced through the ranks,   eventually retiring with the rank of Brigadier General.

In 1960 John met the love of his life, Kathleen Patricia McNally, a registered nurse. They were married in August 1961. John and Pat had four children: Kathy Patricia, Siobhan Mary, John Joseph III, and Joseph Dignam Davidson. John lost his beloved wife of 46 years on St. Patrick’s Day 2007.

John was a life-long educator. In 1960 he began teaching English at Lawrence High School in Cedarhurst, N.Y. In 1969 he was assistant principal of Lincoln Junior High School. In 1970 he became principal of the Academy of the Sacred Heart of Mary, in the Inwood section of the Upper Bronx. In 1971 he served as an assistant principal in Pittsfield, MA. Two years later returned to New York to be  assistant principal of Clarkstown North High School in New City. John held that position for 17 years until his retirement in 2000. Then he was elected to the Clarkstown School Board in 2001, becoming its president in 2006. He retired in 2012.

Also close to John’s heart throughout his life was the Knights of Columbus. John became a Knight in 1966 and received his Fourth  Degree in 1967 in Oceanside, N.Y. When he returned to Rockland County,  he joined the Cardinal McCloskey Council and the Joyce Kilmer Assembly 698. He was one of the founders of the  Pope John XXIII council 7104 in Congers and was elected that council’s first Grand Knight. He has also held the offices of District Deputy, Faithful Navigator of Assemly 698, Past Association Chairman, and Commander of the Honor Guard, which he considered  the “singular honor of his life.”

We thank the Knights of Columbus Triune Council 2052 for providing the information for this tribute.

The Wings to Fly

Sean Miller 2The Wings to Fly
By Guest Blogger Sean Miller

When the Catholic Church had an abundance of vocations it sent out missionaries throughout the world.

But the Church knew that prayer must come before action. So in her wisdom she arranged for religious orders that had a special charism for prayer — holy monks and nuns in the monasteries and cloisters — to pray earnestly for the the missions.

In this way, the souls of the people the missionaries would come in contact with would be well prepared to receive the graces God offers. This is similar to what happens in our own  lives when we seek out God‘s guidance through prayer, which will lead us to the action we need to take next.  Continue reading

The Spirit of the Life Chain

October 6, 2013 will be  21st time that the Life Chain has been held in Rockland County. Here are some of the photos from past years, which we feel best exemplify the spirit of the Life Chain. Vote for your favorite in the poll below. And remember, this year’s Life Chain is this Sunday, Oct. 6, from 2:00 to 3:30 pm.

Students from Albertus Magnus High School Stand Up for Life
AM prolife group

John and Pam Barnhardt Family — Jesus Loves the Little Children
Barnhardt Family

Saint Joseph’s Church Youth Group — Always Faithful!
SJ youth group

The Sisters of Life on Route 59
Sisters Life

God Loves the Mother, Father, and the Child
God MFC

The Natural Choice is Life
Natural choice is life

Life Chain Time in Rockland — Oct. 6

IMG_4158Life Chains are peaceful, prayerful public witnesses of prolife advocates standing together in prayer for an end to abortion and offering a message of compassion and healing for all suffering as a result of abortion.

This year, the 21st Rockland Life Chain again will be held at the intersection of Route 59 and Middleton Ave. on Oct. 6, Respect Life Sunday, 2 to 3:30 pm. There will be 29 Life Chains taking place simultaneously in surrounding counties in New York City and the Hudson Valley.

If you feel the inspiration to do something to help end abortion, but the March for Life in Washington, D.C., in January is too cold or far away, this is the place to come.  Continue reading

40 Days for Life Begins

40  Days -- Knit in mother's wombThis autumn’s 40 Days for Life — a time of prayer and fasting to end abortion — began yesterday in Spring Valley. This is the eleventh time the 40 Days have been held on Perlman Drive where Planned Parenthood is located.

About 15 people gathered for the opening ceremony at 3 p.m., and prayer will continue for 40 days around the clock, from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. at the Perlman Drive site and overnight at the Eucharistic Adoration Chapel of St. Gregory Barbarigo Church in Garnerville, until Nov. 3.

Before the prayer service began, Rabbi Noson Leiter from Torah Jews for Decency spoke about the importance of keeping our community safe from immorality and the destruction of children by abortion.

40 Days -- Rabbi LeiterThen the group, led by Deacon John Kelly from St. Gregory’s, prayed the Divine Mercy Chaplet followed by the rosary.

The organizers would like to invite anyone interested to “please join with us praying and fasting for LIFE because LOVE has a power that can touch the most hardened of hearts!”

Please e-mail RachelMinister1@aol.com or call 845-492-6709 — or just show up!

40 Days for Life Set to Launch on Sept. 25

John Davidson

John Davidson of Congers at last year’s 40 Days for Life. John, who passed away last June, was a staunch advocate of Right to Life, spending numerous hours in support of programs defending Life and the unborn. The Life Chain on Oct. 6 has been dedicated to his memory.

We are beginning another 40 Days of Praying and Fasting to Protect LIFE. Please take one hour a week www.40daysforlife.com.

The hours are from 9 am until 6 pm on public property at Perlman Drive in Spring Valley,  and from 6 pm until 9 am at the Perpetual Eucharistic Adoration Chapel at St. Gregory Barbarigo Church on Cinder Road in Garnerville.

We begin Sept. 25th at 3 pm.
The 40th Day is Nov. 3rd – ending 3 pm

E-mail RachelMinister1@aol.com or call 845-492-6709

Sept. 25 — The Manhattan Declaration Returns Home

From Sister Lucy Marie, Sisters of Life:

Only two weeks remaining to register and space is limited! Wednesday, September 25, from 5:30 to 8:30 p.m., at the Cowin Center of Columbia University (525 West 120th Street in Manhattan).

Admission is free, but registration is required. Please contact the Archdiocese Respect Life Office: 646-794-3192.

Please join us for a very significant event — a forum to discuss the Manhattan Declaration, the ecumenical statement dedicated to defending life, marriage, and religious liberty http://manhattandeclaration.org/#1.

Cardinal Dolan will lead a prayer service, and the forum features extraordinary speakers, The event is co-sponsored by the Archdiocese of New York, Alliance Defending Freedom, DeSales Media, and the New York State Council of the Knights of Columbus.

Manhattan Dec

Remembering the Victims of Abortion

Sept. 14 — National Day of Remembrance for Aborted Children

Three national prolife groups have announced the “National Day of Remembrance for Aborted Children” to take place on Saturday, September 14. It is meant to honor the unborn at the grave sites where they are buried.

The Garden of Innocence at St. Mary of the Assumption Church in Haverstraw

The Garden of Innocence at St. Mary of the Assumption Church in Haverstraw

While there are no such grave sites in Rockland, there are several memorials to those who have been killed by abortion.

A service will be held at one of these sites — The Garden of Innocence — which is located on the south side of St. Mary of the Assumption Church, 46 Conklin Avenue in Haverstraw. It will begin at 5 p.m. (before the 5:30 pm Mass).

There are two other memorials in North Rockland:  at the Marian Shrine in Stony Point and at the Knights of Columbus Council 581 at 56 West Broad Street in Haverstraw.

Nationally, there are over 25 locations where babies have been buried after having been killed by abortion. Many were retrieved from trash dumpsters of abortion clinics or pathology labs where the bodies of the aborted unborn were shipped. Some graves contain hundreds of bodies.

Marian Mem2

Memorial to the Unborn at the Marian Shrine in Stony Point.

Eric Scheidler, Executive Director of the Pro-life Action League, stated, “It’s sobering to realize that grave markers for the unborn victims of abortion list only a date of burial. They have no birthdays because they were never allowed to be born. We can list no date of death, because those who killed them discarded their bodies like garbage. But they are not garbage to us. They are our brothers and sisters. That’s why we buried them, and that’s why we visit their graves to mourn for them and testify to their humanity.”

If you know of other memorials to the unborn in Rockland County, please take a picture of the site and send it to phone number 201-739-4413 or email it to RocklandRTL@optonline.net.

We’d like to publish all photos of these memorials on this website during Respect Life Month.

Respect Life Month — Being Prolife

imagesThere’s no one season for being prolife. No one thing we do.

Rather, it’s a daily commitment that rises from our belief in the sacredness of life, the dignity of every human being. It leads us along a path of service toward others, especially the most vulnerable and those most in need. It causes us to become involved, to share, to pray, and to stand up and speak out when necessary.

Yet the month of October — Respect Life Month — is a special time to deepen our insight of what being prolife is all about. It’s highlighted by liturgies in our churches and observances in the public square. We gather in prayer services and protests, we join in discussions and song.

We’re drawn to events that bring us together because it’s with others that we find our strength. By sharing the sorrows, the uncertainties, the joys, and the exhilaration of the prolife mission we find the place where the courage comes from, and the hope, and the inspiration to keep on going in the year to come.

Will you join us? Here is a short list of some of the events going on in and around Rockland during Respect Life Month 2013. Please select one (or several) that seem right for you — and come! You’ll be glad you did!

More information about each event will be appearing on this site as we get closer to the date. So please check back. If your group or church is doing anything for Respect Life month, please let us know so we can post it on this site and pass the word along. Email: RocklandRTL@optonline.net.

National Day of Remembrance for Aborted Children
Sept. 14 at 5 pm (before the 5:30 pm. Mass)
Garden of Innocence
South side of St. Mary of the Assumption Church
46 Conklin Ave., Haverstraw

40 Days for Life — Opening Ceremony
Sept. 25 at 3 pm
Perelman Drive, Spring Valley (on public property, near the Planned Parenthood office)

40 Days for Life 
Sept. 25 and daily for the next six weeks
9 am to 5 pm (and overnight at the Adoration Chapel of St. Gregory Barbarigo in Garnerville)
Perelman Drive, Spring Valley (on public property, near the Planned Parenthood office)

The Manhattan Declaration Returns Home
Sept. 25, 5:30 pm to 8:30 pm
Columbia University
525 W. 120th St., NYC
Join Timothy Cardinal Dolan for an interfaith prayer service and religious liberty forum

21st Rockland County Life Chain
Oct. 6, 2:00 to 3:30 pm
Intersection of Route 59 and Middletown Road, Nanuet

Good Counsel Communion Breakfast
Oct. 12 at 9:15 am (Mass followed by breakfast)
Marian Shrine, 147 Filor’s Lane, Stony Point
to benefit the Spring Valley Good Counsel home

New York State Right to Life Convention
Oct. 19
Holiday Inn in Oneonta, NY

Concert for Life
Nov. 21 at 7 pm (free, donation requested)
Albertus Magnus High School  [CORRECTION — not the Marian Shrine this year]
to benefit the Spring Valley Good Counsel home