The Notre Dame Student Speech Never Given
<http://www.catholic.org/national/national_story.php?id=33643>http://www.catholic.org/national/national_story.php?id=33643
 


By Len Gutmann
5/26/2009

Catholic Online (<http://www.catholic.org>www.catholic.org)
As a survivor of the era of legalized abortion 
all of the successes that ever became You began with a yes.

<http://www.catholic.org/photos/photo.php?news=33643>
I was, by no choice of my own, formed within a mother who had l

I was, by no choice of my own, formed within a 
mother who had little assistance. She lacked a 
man willing to give me protection. She sustained 
me until she thought she couldn’t. Then she 
succumbed to the institutionalized pressures that 
our nation has allowed­pressures which give a 
woman the chance to give up and cave in to 
despair: a legalized, even subsidized, killing 
industry; a confused, deceived, materialistic 
economic system; and a secularized welfare state 
that erodes an already worn-down, uninspired collective conscience.
DETROIT (Catholic Online) - In order to provide 
balance and equal time to the voices that opposed 
the honoring of President Barack Obama, the Board 
of Directors at Notre Dame University graciously 
allowed the delivery of the following speech at 
the commencement exercises for the class of 2009. 
However, due to security reasons, the actual 
speech could not be delivered until the following Sunday, May, 24, 2009....

Dear Fellow Students, Family and Friends, Faculty 
and Staff, Fr. Jenkins and President Obama,

I am honored to be here to speak on behalf of the 
remaining graduation class of 2009. In using that 
word “honored” I do not wish to add to the pain 
of fresh wounds. In charity I say I am honored, 
and out of charity I intend to honor all. Though 
not originally invited, it seems that enough 
prayers were said, and apparently heard. The 
power of prayer, as we sons and daughters of 
Notre Dame know, can accomplish even the most 
difficult tasks. Its power brings forth a certain 
humility in all of us which urges us to honor 
everyone, beginning with our Lady’s first Son, 
who deserves all honor… and all thanks for 
letting us all share in His infinite power.

As you sit among your classmates today, I ask you 
to look at each one of them, and imagine the 
difficult struggles that had to be overcome so 
they could be sitting next to you. When you 
reflect upon the trials and tribulations through 
which your own personal obstacles were pushed 
aside, you know that you were not alone. Every 
worry about an exam, every hope about a success, 
every thought about whether you were ever good 
enough to become a graduate of such a prominent 
and excellent university­all of those experiences 
that you prayed through, and studied through and 
worked through… they were the same 
experiences­true feelings of weakness--that each 
fellow student surrounding you once lived.

A day like today is one where we, the Notre Dame 
family, celebrate you having recognized your 
weaknesses, and having grown and matured in spite 
of them. A day like today is when we give honor 
to you having gone from weakness to strength, 
from ignorance to wisdom, from darkness to light.

We do this in public, as a family, because this 
successful growth is the result of a joined 
effort. It takes an arena to showcase it. A body 
of people­You­is gathered to prove it. A 
collective success, it is the result of hundreds 
of individual successes. And each of those 
successes is unique, and marvelous, and miraculous. For each one is You.

You know that your own triumphs did not begin 
when you were accepted at this university. They 
started long ago--before high school, before 
elementary school, and even before that. For your 
first success is the result of many previous 
successes. And it culminated, really, with the 
actions of your mother­and your father. But mostly your mother.

As a survivor of the era of legalized abortion, 
all of the successes that ever became You began 
with a yes that was spoken in the heart of the 
woman who, with you today or not, has always been 
a part of you. And you have always been a part of 
her. When she said yes, when she chose to 
continue with you, she turned her back on any 
pressures or temptations to hand you over far too 
soon to our other mother­mother earth. You were 
only just beginning, and it was impossible for 
her to know that you would make it to this place 
today. As our President sits here today as proof, 
it is impossible to know what more any of us can ever become.

I, however, am not the success that any of you 
are now. It cannot be argued that I­along with 
those like me whom I represent--was once exactly 
like you, though only for a brief time. We all 
were exactly alike. In our uniqueness, we were 
forming and taking shape and adjusting to our 
earliest existence. Our cells were coming 
together, molded in the same image and likeness 
as yourselves, while our brains and arms and legs 
and fingers all began to grow. Our faces, too, 
were once like yours. We bathed in the same 
waters that protected you. And we were connected, 
just as you, to the woman who started us­joined 
with a cord, a connection that will always be the 
first symbol of the interdependency that defines the human species.

We know that no life can be sustained by itself. 
We all need some type of aid. We all need some kind of protection.

I was, by no choice of my own, formed within a 
mother who had little assistance. She lacked a 
man willing to give me protection. She sustained 
me until she thought she couldn’t. Then she 
succumbed to the institutionalized pressures that 
our nation has allowed­pressures which give a 
woman the chance to give up and cave in to 
despair: a legalized, even subsidized, killing 
industry; a confused, deceived, materialistic 
economic system; and a secularized welfare state 
that erodes an already worn-down, uninspired collective conscience. ...

She still lives, and in her heart, she knows that 
I would be sitting among you today if she had 
been given something­a word, or a hug, or a few 
dollars freely given­anything at all that might 
have told her a pregnancy was okay, that she had 
the courage within her, that there really was not 
any reason to part from me. I needed her. She 
needed help. Neither of us got what we hoped for. 
Such is the sadness of living in this era.

We are not separated, as she knows and feels. I 
am on her mind often. Now, the same age as you, 
she pictures me with a cap. She sees a smile on 
my face in front of flashing cameras. She watches 
as I lift up a scroll in my hand on a sunny day 
surrounded by friends. In her heart, I am you.

Though not with her by way of touch or sight, I 
can never be away from her… just as you will 
never part from your university which is a lady 
who is your mother and mine. You may travel and 
go and, at times and over time, forget this day. 
But your Notre Dame will always be a part of you.

I ask, on behalf of my friends, that you always 
let us be a part of you as well. Carry us along. 
Take us on your journeys. It will be difficult. 
But you will bring unspeakable joy to our mother if you do.

The world, and some in it, will make you think 
that you are carrying with you one of two things: 
we will be a “difficult decision” that no one­not 
even those among us who’ve reached the highest of 
pay grades­can explain, and thus cannot be 
convinced that we are at all times worth bearing; 
or, we will be radical, revolutionary, 
terror-striking photographs of torn, bloody 
pieces of fetal things meant to frighten and 
divide. But do not listen to them. We are neither.

As for the former, we are not the burden they 
would have you imagine. Rather, we are light 
things to carry, not in need of very much except 
a few years of grateful dependence. If you keep 
us, we will indeed change your lifestyle, but not 
how you think. We will cause you to forget much 
of your own dependence. You will be like gods to 
us, and we will bring out the best in you. In us 
you will find your true independence. And if we 
are lucky to be together long enough, we will 
become your strength in your old age or sickness, 
and we will find our independence in your dependence on us.

As for the latter, we are a mere fraction of the 
photographs of fetal things. Those are 
two-dimensional images that they don’t really 
want to you look at, but still, just 
two-dimensional. Paper-thin renderings of 
soul-less stuff. We have many more dimensions than that.

One day you will see this, and you will marvel.

If you take us with you, we will work with 
you­even through you. Sometimes, it will seem 
that we are more you than you are to yourself. 
That is because we are one. Reconciled by a 
decision to bring life with you, we are­together­the future.

And that is where the President is wrong. With 
all due respect, sir, there will be­in fact, 
already is happening­a reconciliation between two 
parties. You claim to have audacious aspirations, 
so it is troubling to hear that you don’t even 
want to consider us… that you don’t want to 
reconcile a difficult decision with the audacity 
of a future hope. Yes, as you say, we were the 
things of which hard choices are made. We were 
the private realities that our mothers struggled 
with. Do not fool yourself, however, with your 
own platitudes. When our mothers made their 
decisions, no true and gentle pastors or caring 
and healing physicians were there to help. Only 
cold, business-like clinicians whose work demands 
a necessary disregard for hope.

In their troubled consciences, the words of those 
in the business of allowing and supporting 
abortion are telling, especially lately. For we 
are now things­so they say­that ought to be rare.

Ironically, we are not rare, and never will be in 
your scheme of false hopes. Unless your ignorance 
is lifted and your eyes are opened, you will 
never see us. And even if there are just a 
thousand of us in year­instead of the million 
that now are­still you will not notice us. Once 
we have become the matter of a choice to you, we 
then become things to you. Not even animals. Not 
unhatched eggs. Not even organisms. To you we 
become lifeless, invisible matter.

When you refuse to look at us and recognize our 
fundamental right to participate in the ongoing 
struggle to live and to succeed, we disappear.

But we are not gone. We can never be gone. We can 
never be rare. Once we are conceived, we are 
here, in numbers that will one day shock you. 
Over time we may have changed. Incineration, or 
disposal in some landfill, or dumping into the 
oceans­these may have altered our original 
composition. But none of those things can remove 
us from this globe of ours that we all call home. 
On this beautiful planet, this gift of a dwelling 
that is truly the mother of our matter, we still 
are here. We are more a part of this environment 
than you know. Our tissue, our bones, our 
blood­all of that stuff that we were, we still 
are. We’ve just changed. The law of the 
conservation of matter and energy dictates it: 
we­in our new shape as rearranged cells and 
scattered atoms­are as filled with energized 
movement as you are in your young, vibrant, 
marvelous bodies. Even without our spirits, we 
are closer to the environment than you can 
imagine. We are in the air. We are in the soil. 
We are in the water. We are temples waiting to be re-built.

Let us then work with you, and you with us, to 
clean up this earth of ours. Talk to us. Sing 
with us. Join us. Together we can repair any 
damage that’s been done by the arrogant, the greedy, the despairing who abort.

We cannot help you if you do not acknowledge us. 
And history has proven that you cannot help 
yourselves. Alone, ascribing to the world’s 
new--yet so very ancient--belief that we can make 
with science what God makes with love, you will fail.

Yes, sir, and fellow students, we can have 
change. Let’s just not be so haughty as to think 
we can cause this change by envisioning it or 
voting for it. Change does not happen that way. 
Change­good, forward, selfless change­is far more 
than a simple right to make a decision. It is the 
decision itself, the option taken to work toward 
an accepting of the beautiful things of life. It 
is a putting back together of something put 
together wrongly in the first place. Or a 
reassembly of something­like me­once torn and broken.

This is all possible. It’s been done before. It’s 
been done most beautifully throughout the ages by 
your holy Mother Church. As this University 
attests, it may not be perfect in some of its 
members, but it is perfect in its whole. It 
speaks the truth and it counters deceits. It 
audaciously lifts the veil on the words and 
speeches which prop up false and immoral 
principles. And it raises up new life to the 
weakening systems of man by underpinning them 
with realities that true hope has­through faith­long awaited.

You, Our Lady’s class of 2009, and us­the once 
voiceless but always alive unborn­together we can 
participate with her Son each time He tells us 
what He will do in our hearts. Listen to Him. Let 
Him. Hear Him as He tells us what He does: 
“Behold," He says, "I make all things new.” It 
can be done, and we have Notre Dame as our 
example. All it takes is the giving of a simple 
yes, an open and willing receiving of the greatest honor ever bestowed…

­the honor of personhood.

----------

Len Gutmann lives in the Detroit area. He is a 
member of the Knights of Columbus, and is active 
in his parish's pro-life group. A carpenter and 
the father of four, he writes with the support of 
his wife, and at the behest of JPII's call to work for the new evangelization.


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