Giving abortion the boot
Pro-life boot camp gets youth involved
By Jessica Langdon
Leaven staff
Kansas City, Kan. — They’re young, they’re confident, they’re pro-life — and they’re making a difference.
Just how much of a difference, they might never fully know.
A young woman — pregnant and leaning toward abortion — noticed the group of teens praying outside an abortion clinic in Kansas City, Kan., in early June.
The teens didn’t know it at the time, but the mother left the clinic without undergoing the abortion she had come to procure.
She has since sought medical care as she faces a future still filled with uncertainties.
One reason she gave for changing her mind was the sight of all those young people who cared outside the clinic.
The teens’ visit to the abortion clinic was one of several stops of a first-of-its-kind pro-life boot camp in the area.
Formally called the Truth Illuminated Teen Pro-Life Boot Camp, it brought together close to 40 people from Kansas and Missouri June 2-4. Their duties were to pray, learn — and grow in their pro-life convictions.
Taking a stand
Christina Saiki, 15, and Kembry Fellhoelter, 16, might be young, but they are veterans when it comes to taking a stand for life.
Both are members of St. Paul Parish in Olathe and of its Truth Illuminated pro-life youth group.
Both have logged hours praying in front of local abortion clinics. Neither will soon forget what it felt like to pray there with a larger group during the boot camp.
“You just feel so confident in yourself when you go in these huge groups, especially with people your own age,” said Kembry.
When Kembry heard this boot camp was in the works, she told her sister Claudia, 16, it would be cool to be part of the first one. They enlisted.
Christina and her brother Michael, 17, also signed up together for the boot camp, which was a joint project of the Archdiocese of Kansas City in Kansas and the Diocese of Kansas City-St. Joseph.
Now, Christina would recommend it to others.
“They would not regret going at all,” she said. “They would come out a better person because of it.”
And so it was that teens, seminarians and adult volunteers reported for duty at Church of the Ascension in Overland Park on June 2. During the three-day session, they prayed outside the abortion clinic in Kansas City, Kan., and Planned Parenthood in Overland Park. Participants also visited the Wyandotte Pregnancy Clinic to see how it helps mothers-to-be.
‘An issue for everybody’
But that was only the beginning. Hopefully, what the teens learned at the boot camp will make a big difference much closer to home.
Justin Nelson, a seminarian of the Archdiocese of Kansas City in Kansas, said people who are having abortions are often close to the ages of the teens that participated. If, in the future, a friend facing an unplanned pregnancy confides in them, these teens will be well-prepared to help them.
They have to have absolute conviction in their beliefs, said Nelson, who helped bring the boot camp about. That conviction will keep them from being swayed by emotion during the friend’s crisis and stop them from saying an abortion would be OK just this once.
Young people have to be able to acknowledge a friend’s problem, said Nelson, and still let her know that an abortion “is going to give you two problems — the second is going to be much worse than the first.”
The teens were tackling what Nelson believes to be the biggest evil we face today. But when faced with a challenge, he said, young people are ready to tackle it.
“It’s an issue for everybody,” he said.
Value in every life
Sidewalk counseling and peaceful prayer were not the only topics covered by the boot camp. It also treated Catholic teaching on sexuality and chastity.
Nelson’s friend Jennifer Widhalm — a sidewalk counselor and cofounder and president of a mission called LifeFront — addressed the topic of purity in a session on the theology of the body. She also gave a presentation on Planned Parenthood.
Maria Graham, a volunteer with the Catholic Pro-Life Committee of North Texas, also struck a chord with the teens. She talked a bit about sidewalk counseling, but focused on “pro-life as a way of life and not a position on abortion.” She wanted the teens to understand that “every person is created equal and priceless.” That value is based on God’s love. Every person has it, said Graham, even in a society that challenges that idea on many levels.
Power of prayer
On the day the boot camp group visited the abortion clinic in Kansas City, Kan., the participants saw Graham reaching out to a young woman who appeared to be putting together the money she needed for an abortion.
When Nelson recognized what was happening, he engaged the group in the moment.
“We began a rosary at that time with the intention of this woman and her child,” Nelson said.
Graham emphasized to the mother that all the young people out there were praying for her.
When the teens left the clinic later that day, the outcome of the young woman’s story was not yet clear.
Nelson called the news he received later about her change of heart an “incredible testament for the power of prayer.”

