The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Decency hasn’t passed away; there are good people around us

- Kathryn Lopez Columnist

“It was June 1, 2006. I will never forget that date.”

That was the day Angela Jozwicki had an abortion. She had grown up with “a lot of screaming” around her, and was using drugs by the time she was 14. In 2006, she was 22 and found herself pregnant.

“I knew in my heart that a baby would stop me from having drugs, but I wasn’t ready,” she told Andrea PicciottiB­ayer of The Catholic Associatio­n Foundation for an amicus brief in a case before the Supreme Court earlier this year. “I used abortion to avoid getting better,” she confessed.

In October 2015, a dollar-store pregnancy test told her she was pregnant again. She was still using drugs, so she made an appointmen­t for another abortion. But the baby’s father didn’t show up to drive her to the clinic the morning of the appointmen­t. She believes God showed up that morning instead.

“I decided that I would keep that baby.” She started making calls to pregnancy help centers, and Soundview Pregnancy Services in Long Island area of New York, answered.

One of the members of the staff there, Barbara, talked with Angela during each week of her pregnancy, as she got educated about pregnancy and childcare. Barbara was even at the hospital when it came time for Angela to deliver her baby.

Staff at the care center helped her enroll in the a supplement­al nutrition program and apply for financial assistance during her pregnancy and the first months with her son, Cameryn.

At first, Angela didn’t think she could turn to her mother for help, but the center helped them, too, in their strained relationsh­ip.

As a result, a grandmothe­r would help her daughter and grandson with a place to stay as Angela looked toward getting a job once Cameryn was old enough for preschool.

“I always thought that people were fake, but they are genuine,” she said about the people at the care center.

Brenda Coe is another of the 13 women whom Picciotti-Bayer interviewe­d before the Supreme Court heard a case and ultimately gave a reprieve to pregnancy care centers in California.

Coe and her husband were introduced by a mutual friend to Krystal, a pregnant single mother. Krystal had a 2-year-old son and couldn’t raise another child in her current circumstan­ces.

Krystal had already sought help from the Pregnancy Help Center in Torrance, California, confirming her pregnancy and talking with them about adoption.

Once she met the Coes, she asked them if they would adopt her baby.

The center became a part of all of their lives. Brenda would accompany Krystal through ultrasound­s, and helped her interview the obstetrici­an she would choose for her and the baby’s care (the doctor also volunteere­d at the center).

Brenda and her husband were present when their child was born, and they all stay connected through pictures and phone conversati­ons.

There are more stories like Angela, Brenda and Krystal’s, from so many centers around the country.

In 2017, 2,752 pregnancy care centers provided almost 2 million people with free services, according to the Charlotte Lozier Institute.

As the nation marked the passing of President George Herbert Walker Bush, it seemed to mourn the passing decency and civility, too.

It’s a credit to the way he lived his life, with family at the center of it, that he inspired such a tribute. But we ought not allow this to be a nostalgic end.

We are not powerless. There are people among us who help others, who sacrifice for others and who make it possible for others to do so as well.

That’s certainly bound to be more fruitful than believing our good days and people are gone.

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