Pro-Life

Jessie Morgan: Taking Steps For Those Who Can’t

My name is Jessie Morgan, and I am so excited to take on an internship at the PA Pro Life Federation this summer!

I grew up in Sunbury, about an hour up the river from Harrisburg, and attended Line Mountain School District growing up.

The pro-life caused sparked my interest in the8th grade, when my middle school Campus Club (Christian charitygroup) organized a ‘Walk For Life’ for our local Pregnancy Care Center. Asyoung as I was at the time, I had virtually no idea what abortion even was; Ijust thought the Pregnancy Care Center was a sanctuary for new mothers in needof support and resources.

I vividly remember the design on our T-Shirts,with a picture of two tiny footprints displayed over the front. Underneath thepicture in italics was the phrase, “Takingsteps for those who can’t”. I wasn’t really sure what it meant, but not toolong afterwards I found out the truth— along with helping mothers, the core of the Pregnancy Care Center was toprotect the lives of unborn babies. To save them from abortion.

It was not easy to process the unthinkable. Ata young age, children and teenagers are much more adaptable to new ideas; theycan normalize practices such as abortion because they’re growing up in anenvironment where they are told these practices are okay, that they are safe.But I never could. I would remember those two tiny footprints and my heartwould ache for the little human lives that were never given a chance toexperience life.

I was first introduced to the Federation after entering their annual Pro-Life Oratory contest in 2018. My speech took first place, and I had the amazing opportunity to attend the National Right To Life Convention in Kansas City, Missouri later that summer. Following the convention, I would hop on a bus to the March for Life in Washington, D.C. every January. While the convention provided me with a plethora of helpful information about life in the womb, the March gave me the hope that there were thousands of others in this country who were willing to stand up to protect the sanctity of all human life.

During my internship, I hope to use the skills and abilities I have gained in my own education to engage young people with the pro-life movement. A good friend once mentioned to me that real culture change cannot come from a change of law, but a change of heart. If we can impress the value of unborn life onto the hearts of our young people, I believe we can foster a society that will not only consider abortion illegal, but unthinkable.