TAKE OUR NATIONAL POLL
For the sake of little baby Leonor Beltran it’s time for the United States to join the rest of the civilized world and …
… PROTECT BABIES FROM LATE-TERM ABORTIONS!
Now make no mistake: we must protect every baby at every stage. But the next step to getting there is to awaken people to late-term abortion.
Leonor’s story is a tragic one.
Her mother, Irene Zamorano, was six months pregnant with Leonor when she made the tragic mistake of killing her little girl in a late term abortion. Irene has given her heartfelt testimony publicly many times as an active member of the Silent No More Awareness Campaign, of which Priests for Life Executive Director Janet Morana is a founder.
Like the vast majority of women who’ve had an abortion, Irene deeply regrets killing her little girl and she hopes her witness will keep other abortion vulnerable mothers from repeating her mistake.
In her testimony Irene admits that she made a dreadful mistake when she’d convinced herself that she couldn’t take care of another baby and chose to have an abortion.
But moments after the abortionist injected a chemical into her womb that would kill her baby, Irene had a change of heart. She woke up from what she described as a “chaotic haze” and said:
“My God, what am I doing here. She’s my daughter.”
In a frantic effort to save her baby, Irene raced from the abortion clinic and went to her mother who drove her to a nearby labor and delivery hospital. Irene desperately wanted to save her baby but it was too late. Her baby’s heart had stopped beating.
Even though Irene was overcome with guilt and grief she refused to go back to the abortion clinic and its merchants of death.
So Irene labored for seven hours and gave birth to her little girl. After Leonor was born, the nurse put the baby’s lifeless body on Irene’s chest where Irene held her and caressed her and cried over her, all the while asking Leonor to forgive her.
Leonor is one of an estimated ten thousand babies killed every year in America by abortions at 21 weeks or more.
Their families bear a lifetime of pain.