Nearly 200 from Diocese participate in 2025 March for Life

About 200 from the Diocese of Venice, mostly youth, joined tens of thousands of other like-minded people from across the country in standing up for life during the 52nd annual National March for Life in Washington, D.C., Jan. 24, 2025.

The Diocesan group, which included students from Cardinal Mooney Catholic High School in Sarasota, Bishop Verot Catholic High School in Fort Myers, the Donahue Catholic Academy of Ave Maria in Ave Maria, and the Ave Maria School of Law in Naples, was organized by the Diocesan offices for Respect Life as well as Youth and Young Adult Outreach. Also participating were Diocesan Seminarians who are studying at Pope St. John XXIII National Seminary in Weston, Massachusetts, and St. Vincent de Paul Regional Seminary in Boynton Beach.

Many national leaders, including Vice President JD Vance, Senate Majority Leader John Thune, House Speaker Mike Johnson, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis, as well as former professional surfer Bethany Hamilton spoke during the event. The 2025 theme for the National March for Life was, “Life: Why We March,” which was aimed to highlight the pro-life movement’s core message to protect unborn children and support their mothers.

The night before the March for Life, many of the youth participated in a Vigil Mass at the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception. The morning of the March was a Youth Rally, held in the United Center.

Andres Prias, Diocesan Director of Youth and Young Adult Outreach, said the “youth were incredibly enthusiastic and deeply aware of the reason behind the trip. Despite the freezing temperatures, they marched with courage and boldly proclaimed, ‘We March for Life!’”

Liana, a student from Donahue Academy shared” “We are marching for the babies, those who are not here and can’t be here, and for the mothers who think they have no choice. But they do, and we want them to choose life.”

Alexa, a student from Bishop Verot stated: “At the March for Life, we’re marching against abortion. Many children are having their lives taken away, and (some) think that it’s okay to put laws saying that all these babies can just be killed. No, they still have a life, and we are here to march for their life. They are just people like we are. Even though, like, at Planned Parenthood you’re supposed to see your sonogram at six weeks, they say it’s just a clump of cells. No, it’s not. It’s actually a life, and we are here marching for that life so they can live on. We, as people, cannot take that right away from them. That’s it.”

The March for Life began in response to the 1972 Roe v. Wade U.S. Supreme Court decision which cleared the way for unlimited abortion in the country. While that decision was overturned in 2022, the fight didn’t end there and is continuing at all levels of government.

The effort to protect life in the Diocese of Venice does not end with the National March for Life or the Jan. 18 March for Life in Ave Maria. Within the Diocese, peaceful prayer warriors stand up as witnesses for life in front of abortion facilities each week.

In addition, the spring campaign of 40 Days for Life peaceful prayer vigil in front of abortion facilities in Sarasota, Fort Myers and Naples begins on Ash Wednesday, March 5, and continues through Lent. For more details, please visit https://www.40daysforlife.com/en/.

If you would like to learn more about Respect Life issues and how you can be a witness for life, please visit https://dioceseofvenice.org/respectlife.

Pro-Life message needs to resonate for all

Made in the image and likeness of God, every life matters.

From conception to natural death, the fight to defend the life of the most vulnerable continues. Although there have been victories in recent years in curbing access to abortion in Florida and nationwide, much work still needs to be done.

For this reason, more than 1,300 took part in the Fourth Annual Ave Maria March for Life on Jan. 18, 2025, including Bishop Frank J. Dewane. The March was a joint effort of the Parish Respect Life Ministry, Ave Maria University, and the Knights of Columbus, and included inspirational speakers.

In addition, on Jan. 24, a group of nearly 200 from the Diocese of Venice, mostly high schoolers, travelled to the National March for Life in Washington, D.C. joining tens of thousands of others on the national stage.

Each of these events occurred in connection to the Day of Prayer for the Legal Protection of the Unborn, Jan. 22, a day designated by the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops for the faithful to pause and reflect on the damage caused by more than 65 million abortions since the 1972 Roe v. Wade U.S. Supreme Court decision cleared the way for unlimited abortion in the country. While that decision was overturned in 2022, the fight didn’t end there. The states are now responsible for setting laws on abortion access and the result is chaotic, meaning some states allow abortion nearly to the moment of birth, while states like Florida have banned all abortions beyond six weeks of gestation.

The fight is clear, because as Bishop Dewane noted, when Pope Francis was recently asked to respond to the “issue” of abortion, the Holy Father stated: “Abortion is not an issue. It’s murder.”

“Too often the political realm drags us into a fight over this ‘issue,’ but that is wrong,” the Bishop said. “We are not in a political fight over an issue in this country, we are in a moral struggle in our country because no longer do many see the value of life. We must remember, each individual life is made in the image and likeness of God. That is what we are fighting to uphold.”

Speaking directly to the youth at the Ave March, Bishop Dewane said it is they who will carry the fight into the future.

“It is murder that you have to reach out and stop,” the Bishop said. “You are our hope. You are our prayer. The Lord has given you a mission in life. He says in the Gospel, ‘Follow me!’ If we don’t follow Him about the sanctity of life, we not only fail Christ, but we also fail ourselves, we fail our neighbors, we fail our families, and we fail our Creator. Stand up and speak out. Let this question make you become more the man or woman of God you are called to be.”

Several of the high school participants spoke after the March about being excited to be part of the Pro-Life movement, knowing how important it is for their generation to speak up for the unborn.

One young lady from St. John the Evangelist Parish in Naples not how impressed she was that “the Bishop said our generation is on a mission. That mission is to be a witness for life before our friends and family, but most importantly for the Glory of God.”

Speakers during the Ave March included Sharon Levesque, Ave Maria Parish Respect Life Ministry leaders and coordinator of the March; Jim Havens, radio and podcast host and president and founder of The Men’s March; Steven W. Mosher, president of the Population Research Institute; Kimberly King, vice president of student affairs at Ave Maria University; Campbell Rose Yates, middle school vice president of the Pro-Life Club at Donahue Academy of Ave Maria; Audrey Fairchild, high school vice president of the Pro-Life Club at Donahue Academy; and Kate Richardson, of the Ave Maria University Pro-Life Club.

All of the speakers spoke about the defeat of the extreme Amendment 4 in the November 2024 Florida election which would have radically expanded access to abortion in the state. The vote was too close, and Bishop Dewane said that the work to educate people on the horrors of abortion starts with events such as this Ave Maria March.

Included in the Ave Maria March was a group of 175 from St. Michael Parish in Wauchula guided by the Servant Sisters of the Lord and the Virgin of Matara.

In addition to other faithful from throughout the Diocese, there were groups from as far away as the Archdiocese of Miami, Diocese of St. Petersburg and Diocese of Orlando.

The effort to protect life does not end with the Marches. Starting March 5, Ash Wednesday, and continuing through Lent, there will be three 40 Days for Life spring campaign locations within the Diocese (Fort Myers, Naples, and Sarasota). During the campaign, the faithful will stand in peaceful prayer to end abortion. For more details, please visit https://www.40daysforlife.com/en/.

If you would like to learn more about Respect Life issues and how you can be a witness for life, please visit https://dioceseofvenice.org/respectlife.

Standing for Life – Hundreds participate in local and national walks

Pro-Life prayer warriors, many of them youth, went to St. Augustine, Washington, D.C., and Ave Maria, in mid-January 2023 to be witnesses for life marking the tragic 50th anniversary of the Roe v. Wade U.S. Supreme Court decision which cleared the way for legalized abortion in the U.S.

The difference in 2023 is that on June 24, 2022, the U.S. Supreme Court’s landmark ruling in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization effectively overturned five decades of unlimited access to abortion.

This allowed the three Marches for Life to be celebratory in nature but tempered with the political reality that now each state has different laws regarding abortion ranging from outright bans to allowing an abortion up until birth. This means the Catholic Church’s fight to protect life from conception until natural death continues.

Several groups from the Diocese participated in the State March for Life in St. Augustine on Jan. 14, 2023, while some 200 from the Diocese were in D.C. for the National March for Life on Jan. 20. The next day, nearly 1,000 took part in the second annual March for Life organized by Ave Maria Parish.

Bishop Frank J. Dewane, who was in DC and Ave Maria, said he was impressed by the signs in DC carried by the young people which proclaimed, “Our Generation Is Pro-Life.”

“There was a determination and excitement – it electrified the whole crowd,” Bishop Dewane said when speaking at the Ave Maria March. “The message I gave those young pilgrims, and for all of us, is to take on in their life the message of Jesus Christ and live it always, that is understanding the absolute value that life must have as we live as men and women of God.”

Living one’s life this way comes with certain challenges, Bishop Dewane admitted.

“Let us be the radical witness that is called for in today’s society,” Bishop continued. “Let us be that voice in the wilderness that cries out repeatedly about the value of life – just like what happened to Christ when he was among his neighbors in Nazareth – and as we heard in today’s Gospel (Mk 3:20-21), you are going to get bullied. Someone is going to yell back and respond. That’s fine. Address them – remember it is personal for you and we must work to change the heart of that person, so they value life, and come to know the truth of Christ.”

Annabella Augustine, a pilgrim to DC from Cardinal Mooney Catholic High School in Sarasota, is taking up the call to spread the word of life.

“This is my first time coming to the March for Life and I can say this was such an exhilarating experience that I will never forget. My goal is to be a voice for the younger generations and help them see the truth in a world of chaos.”

Mooney schoolmate James Rowan described the March less as a peaceful protest and more as a “celebration of life and recognition for the families who are going through or have gone through an abortion.”

In the 50 years since the Roe decision more than 63 million unborn children were deprived of their right to life.

The Florida Conference of Catholic Bishops said in a Jan. 22 statement, the Day of Prayer for the Legal Protection of Unborn Children, that the Dobbs decision “is a fruit of prayer, born of a commitment to justice.”

However, subsequent Florida legislation still allows abortion to the first 15 weeks of pregnancy. “Our advocacy for the legal protection of life in the womb must continue to make the most of the opportunities presented by Dobbs. The legislature must enact further limits on abortion,” the Florida Bishops stated.

Sharon Levesque, who is President of the Respect Life Outreach at Ave Maria Parish and helped organize the community march, was pleased with the large turnout, but said it would return in 2024.

There will be a third annual March for Life on Jan. 20, 2024, because “we will continue to march so long as the life of any unborn child is threatened in the world.”

At Ave Maria, the gathering began at the university football field, where various dignitaries, including Bishop Dewane, spoke. Then everyone marched through the Ave Maria University campus more than a mile to the steps of the Parish Church, all while praying the rosary and singing along the way.

Among the larger groups in DC were representatives from Cardinal Mooney, Bishop Verot Catholic High School in Fort Myers, St. Michael Parish in Wauchula, Ave Maria University and the Ave Maria School of Law. Several smaller groups from a variety of Parishes also took part.

Two Diocesan priests, Father Eric Scanlan, Chaplain at Cardinal Mooney as well Pastor of Incarnation Parish in Sarasota, and Father Mark Yavarone, Oblate of the Virgin Mary, Director of Spirituality at Our Lady of Perpetual Help Retreat Center in Venice, were part of the March.

Participants from the Diocese attended the Vigil Mass on Jan. 20 at the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception in Washington, and a Mass on the day of the March for all Florida pilgrims at St. Peter Parish on Capitol Hill where the main celebrant was Bishop Dewane.

Diocesan seminarians from St. Vincent de Paul Regional Seminary in Boynton Beach and Pope St. John XXIII National Seminary in Weston, Massachusetts, participated with their respective schools.

Bishop Dewane gave the group in DC and Ave Maria direction to go forward and be agents of change in society.

“We must act because being in a personal relationship with the Lord does not allow us to permit abortion at any time,” Bishop Dewane said. “Let us speak out! Be the strength! Be the message of the Lord that you are called to be! Let us stand up next to Jesus Christ and proudly be Pro-Life!”

If you would like to learn more about the Respect Life issues and how you can be a witness for life, please visit https://dioceseofvenice.org/respectlife.