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Archbishop José H. Gomez
By Archbishop José H. Gómez
I am excited for OneLife LA this weekend.
We will be walking for life again this Saturday, Jan. 19. From our city’s first church at La Placita on Olvera Street we will march to the Los Angeles State Historic Park, proudly proclaiming the beauty and holiness of human life.
This year marks the fifth anniversary of our annual walk for life and family, and our program this year is probably our most ambitious.
The reason we gather for OneLife LA is to commemorate one of the saddest days in our country’s history — Jan. 22, 1973, when the U.S. Supreme Court made abortion legal.
In the years since Roe v. Wade, we have seen how allowing the killing of children in the womb has slowly led to a change in our society’s attitudes about life outside the womb.
Post-Roe America is a place where human life in so many ways is treated as cheap and disposable, and where the human person is more and more regarded as “something” and not “somebody.”
There is so much we could protest against the way our society treats the unborn, the elderly, the sick, the disabled, and the poor.
But OneLife LA is about the light, not the darkness. We believe in overcoming the evil that we see by the good that we do.
OneLife LA is not only an event, it is a vision. In a society that promotes a selfish “me against you” individualism, OneLife LA celebrates people who are living lives of self-sacrifice, generosity, and service.
In a society where people seem more isolated and more divided, we are bringing people together, building community, and strengthening people’s sense of empathy and solidarity with others.
This year’s OneLife LA lineup is all about people who are making a difference through the creative solutions they are applying to the problems of our times. You will meet people working to change our abortion culture, and those who are helping the homeless.
You will meet advocates for the disabled, and those working to strengthen families and to keep college kids Catholic, and many more.
I am happy that this year we are welcoming back Rick Smith, founder of Hope Story. Rick was with us at our inaugural OneLife LA, and he is a fearless fighter for the dignity of those like his son, Noah, who are born with Down syndrome.
One terrible outgrowth of our abortion culture is that most children with Down syndrome today are destroyed in the womb rather than given the chance to be born. Rick, Noah and their family are a beautiful witness to the joy that comes when we open ourselves to welcome life.
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Lizzie Velásquez