NOTRE DAME, IN - Thousands scorn the University's tribute to President Obama and, chosing "truth over prestige," celebrate with students and Bishop John M. D'Arcy.
(This bulletin consists of an account by Bill
Dempsey of the events
sponsored
by the student group ND
Response on Graduation
Day. Bill and his
wife Mary were joined at Notre Dame by Arina
Grossu ('05) of the
Sycamore Board and a number of Sycamore
supporters. In our next bulletin we will discuss the
dark side
of Commencement.)
While the University on May 17th was compromising
its claim to Catholic identity by according
honors to President Obama inside McKenna Hall,
outside on
the South Quad a courageous band of students and
thousands of their supporters joined in a moving
display of
fidelity to the Church and of love for the unborn. This
stirring
event predictably went unnoted by the secular media.
What
was not predictable was that the University would, in
its
torrent of self-congratulatory publicity and extensive
web site
coverage, suppress any account of this dramatic
exercise in
free speech, academic freedom, and pro-life
advocacy. The
University eagerly "engages" the President by
providing him
a coveted platform along with an honorary degree, but
it
studiously turns its face from the protests of those in
its
family who deplore its actions.
The Notre Dame Center for Ethics and Culture
has
noted the
irony:
In light of the public statements of prominent
administrators
at Notre Dame affirming Notre
Dame's "unambiguous"
commitment to the pro-life cause, one might have
expected
that some notice would have been taken of what was
surely
the most significant pro-life event on this campus in
many
years. By refusing even to acknowledge the
student-organized event, the university also appears to
be
silencing
important dialogue partners for the dialogue to which
they
have become so passionately
committed.
You will soon be able to view the principal events.
We
arranged for a full videotaping and have provided the
product
to the Center, as we will to any University organization
and,
of course, to the University itself. We will advise you as
soon
as the video is posted on our or some other site.
Videos are
available now on the sites of the Center and
NDResponse, but the one that is coming is of higher
quality and
you
will do well to wait.
In the meantime, here is a summary that
intersperses passages from the students' news
release with reflections by Bishop D'Arcy:
Bishop D'Arcy on the Eucharistic Adoration
Saturday evening: "The
Alumni Chapel was packed - people standing in
the aisles. Father
Kevin Russeau, CSC, a quiet hero of these days,
exposed the Blessed
Sacrament. There was not a sound in the chapel,
just quiet prayer. The
group was made up of students and their parents."
ND Response on the Sunday events: "Approximately 3000 people
gathered on the South Quad of the University of
Notre Dame's campus
this past Sunday for a Mass, rally, and prayer vigil
hosted by the
student coalition ND Response. With pro-life
supporters and Notre
Dame faithful traveling in from places as far away
as Mexico, New
York, California, and Florida to stand alongside the
ND Response
students on their graduation day, Sunday's events
not only provided
powerful witness to the sanctity of human life but
also expressed
constructive disappointment at the University of
Notre Dame's decision
to honor President Barack Obama, who has
publicly supported abortion
and embryo-destructive stem cell research during
his tenure in office."
Bishop D'Arcy: "I arrived to a stirring address by
[Rev.] Bill Miscamble,
[CSC], a great scholar, a former head of the
history department, and a
good friend of mine. I was invited to the platform. I
said that in this
time of sadness, I had thought there were no
winners. I was wrong.
The young people were the heroes. The dignity
and the substance and
the prayer which they brought to these events was
extraordinary. I told
them John D'Arcy was not important, but the
Office of Bishop was, and
I
was honored to be with them."
ND Response: "Following
Sunday's rally, nearly 40
graduates who
had decided to
skip
their commencement ceremony gathered in the
University's Grotto for a
prayer vigil and to listen to a meditation given by
Fr. Frank Pavone,
National Director of Priests for Life. These
students were joined at this
vigil by over 800 people, including their parents,
siblings, and
families."
A good -- perhaps the only -- press account
appears
in the Ft. Wayne/So.
Bend
diocesan
paper
. The homilist was Father Russeau,
and the speakers in addition to Father Miscamble
were Chris Godfrey, ND Law '93, Life
Athletes Founder and President, starting offensive
guard for Super
Bowl XXI Champion New York Giants; Elizabeth
Borger,
ND '78, Former
Chairman of the Board of the Women's Care
Center; Lacy Dodd, ND
'99, Room at the Inn Board of Directors, Charlotte,
NC; Father John
Raphael, SSJ, ND '89, Principal of St. Augustine
High School in New
Orlenas, LA; and Dr. David Solomon, ND
Associate Professor of
Philosophy, W.P. and H.B.White Director of the
Notre Dame Center for
Ethics and Culture and Chair of the Steering
Committee for the ND
Fund to Protect Human Life.
Texts of the speeches are available at NDResponse and Center for Ethics and Culture; but
good as they are, the written word in this instance
cannot match the spoken, so it would be unprofitable
to
substitute reading for viewing.
The attached photos of the
setting
and
speakers provide a sense of the event.
Note in particular the glorious floral arrangements,
the gift of those of
you -- 139 in number -- who contributed so
generously in order to grace with beauty this
special day for the students and their families.
About $5,000.00 was contributed, with
$4,000 going to the flowers and the balance
to the ND Fund for the Protection of
Human Life. (A reminder to donors: To ease our
administrative burden, acknowledgments in this
instance will be sent only on request.)
Among the photos of the speakers, attend
particularly to
that of Lacy Dodd with her daughter Mary, for, as
you know from
Lacy's essay, it is the Marys of the world whose
lives are at stake in
this controversy.
One unexpected sidelight deserves mention.
At the
outset of his talk, Dr. David Solomon invited any
faculty members who
might be in the audience to join him, and some 25
thereupon
made their way to the podium. (One of the
attached photos records the
scene.) The fact that the great majority of
faculty were at that moment applauding
President Obama testifies to the school's loss of
Catholic sensibility; but it is heartening to
know that there remain
a number willing to stand publicly against the
pressure to defend Father Jenkin's action. Surely
there are many
more who are quietly in sympathy.
These celebrations on the South Quad and the
Grotto, which answered the prayers of so many that
God
manifest His presence in the midst of this wretched
affair, represented
Notre Dame at its best. We will talk about the
other face of Notre Dame
in our next bulletin.

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