Leslie Printice was a young widow in New York City when she
first became active in the pro-life movement. A member of Gardiner Spring's congregation at the prominent
Brick Presbyterian Church, she was encouraged by his sermons on child-killing
to take a bold and active stand.
She organized several meetings in her midtown Manhattan brownstone of
doctors, lawyers, politicians, judges, and community leaders to hear the facts
about the abortion trade. Under
the auspices of the church she set up the New York Parent and Child
Committee. The committee
established prayer networks, sidewalk counseling shifts, and even alternative
care programs with Christian doctors.
It also organized regular protests in front of Anna Lohman's five area
abortion franchises--known professionally as Madame Restell, Lohman was the
boldest, richest, and most visible child-killer.
Tenacious and unrelenting, Leslie led a rally outside
Lohman's lavish home on this day that was by turns emotional, physical, and
fierce. When Lohman went to trial
for the first time the next year, Leslie was there--despite innumerable threats
on her life from a number of the gangsters on Lohman's payroll--to testify with
several children "saved from the butcher's knife."
Nearly half a century later, her efforts
were recognized in Albany by Governor Theodore Roosevelt as the primary catalyst for the
state's tougher legislation and stiffer enforcement of protections for the essential right to life of all New Yorkers.
1 comment:
Her conviction and determination were evidence of God's unbelievable grace. I'm reminded of I John 5:5 and strive to have a heart like this.
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