Excerpt from Jojo Ruba’s Nov./Dec. 2009 newsletter. Jojo is a pro-life apologist with the Canadian Centre for Bioethical Reform.
I also gave our Echoes of the Holocaust presentation on several campuses. …
That’s the same talk I was to give at McGill University at the end of my speaking tour.
I already knew there was intense pressure on the pro-life students on that campus. First, they had to fight to get club status at their school. When they got it, abortion advocates accused them of “traumatizing” McGill students for inviting pro-life women who’ve had abortions to speak at their school and for displaying fetal models publicly.
That controversy ensured that there was a lot of interest (and complaints) about my talk. But not everyone cared to hear it. The student union called my talk “hate” and banned it from their property. Fortunately, the university supported the pro-life students and allowed my talk in a building not owned by the student union.
But abortion advocates, headed by supporters of the student union, didn’t give up. Just as they did in Halifax earlier this year, protesters interrupted my presentation. About 20 students and others chanted, sang and heckled for almost two hours, preventing me from speaking (check the link of the month). They even sang Happy Birthday to Abortion and Amazing Grace to ensure that I was silenced.
Though I invited them to ask questions and raise their arguments at the end of my presentation, they refused to listen and wouldn’t let me speak, even going out of their way to block the screen.
When campus security and police finally arrived and threatened to arrest them, most quietenwere taken away in handcuffs. I found out later they were never charged! In fact, no one was punished for their actions. When the police left to take the two away, the rest of the protesters who had quietened down began heckling again and continued to interrupt my presentation.
As discouraging as the protest was, what it ensured was that more discussion occurred. Students debated the issue in their student media. Even the local CTV affiliate mentioned the story as did the National Post. More importantly, these debates were not just about free speech but what kind of free speech is acceptable on campus – is it fair to compare the victims of abortion with the victims of past genocides? That’s exactly the kind of question we want students asking.
In fact, about half a dozen pro-lifers came up to me after the talk to ask me to explain the comparison and to discuss what they can do to share the pro-life message in Quebec.
Even abortion advocates came to ask me questions after the talk. One of the more vocal hecklers approached me and looked contrite. He said that in the brief time he could hear my presentation, when he stopped heckling, he actually began to listen. “I know you probably don’t want to talk to me but I wanted you to know that after hearing a little bit of your talk, I see where you were going and wanted to hear more.”
This shows why it is so important for us to be on the frontlines of the abortion debate. When abortion advocates use these tactics, it is because their arguments are so weak, they cannot stand under scrutiny. Their actions betray their desperation. I even found an article that was being distributed by the protesters written by Denisse Temin. In it, she complains about how effective pro-lifers are in reopening the abortion debate on campus. She writes “I am deeply concerned about how anti-choice youth groups are forging a battle within the grounds of educational institutions…This has grabbed the media’s attention, stirring public debate and backlash against [abortion advocates]…”
To read the complete newsletter and learn more about CCBR and pro-life apologetics, email Jojo Ruba at email@unmaskingchoice.ca or call him at 403-668-0485.



