Friday, 27 February 2026

 

The Photo They Don’t Want You to See

The photo is haunting: A tiny baby boy, his minute legs pulled toward his visibly ribbed chest, one hand resting on his bottom, the other pulled up to his face. He appears to be sucking his thumb, perhaps to console himself. He is dying.

“This is baby Samuel,” wrote South Australian pro-life activist Dr. Joanna Howe in an Instagram caption. “Born alive after an abortion at 16 weeks, he sucked his thumb in the Butterfly Room at a [Queensland] hospital. He lived for over 30 minutes. He was perfectly healthy prior to his abortion. He was left to die. No one picked him up, wrapped him, or gave him any medical care to alleviate his pain and suffering.”

In a sane, moral society, this photograph—despite being slightly blurred and clearly taken on a cell phone—would be for the abortion wars what the photo of the young girl Kim PhĂșc, fleeing naked and in terror after a 1972 napalm attack, was for Vietnam. Both highlight the suffering of children; both expose the horrific cost behind our polite public defenses of our public policy. These photos stir the conscience.

But we are not a sane or moral society. After Howe published the photo of baby Samuel, which she says was given to her by a whistleblower who took it in the room for grieving parents at Townsville University Hospital in Queensland, the authorities swiftly set to work to suppress it, and the hospital has launched an investigation into how it was shared. The photo went viral in Australia, and then around the world.

The Guardian noted with concern that the “distressing picture of a foetus being called ‘baby Samuel’ is now being used by a broad range of anti-abortion activists,” but did not explore why the photo of the dying child was so distressing—to do so would be to violate the media outlet’s commitment to abortion rights. Instead, the outlet noted that it “is understood Queensland Health, the Queensland government, THHS and others are doing everything they can to get the image removed from social media.”

Even the authorities—from the hospital to the state government—recognize that the photograph of Samuel’s dying moments is too powerful to permit. The soothing lies of the abortion industry can only survive when babies are killed quietly, their suffering muffled by the bodies of their mothers, or left to die alone, uncared for, uncomforted, and most importantly, unseen. For the hospital, the crime was not what was done to the baby boy—it was a “serious breach of confidentiality.” This is the morality of Nazi bureaucracy.

Baby Samuel is like Kim PhĂșc in that his suffering is representative of legions of others. Howe, a professor of law at the University of Adelaide, emphasized that his fate is “not an isolated case. It happened to 50 Queensland babies in 2022 who survived their abortion and were left to die.” She cited another example in the same hospital. A baby girl was “injected in the heart with poison at 25 weeks. She suffered a cardiac arrest, going into excruciating pain. Her mother was given labour-inducing drugs and baby Amira was born intact.”

The little girl, who weighed 726 grams and was about “the size of a pineapple,” was healthy, as was her mother. She was born dead. There are no baby photos.

Stories like this are not rare, and despite the secrecy of abortion regimes, they leak out like blood under a clinic door. In 2021, a healthcare student in New Zealand witnessed a healthy baby left to die after surviving an abortion; the child was left gasping for breath for two hours. She reported that the practice is common and was traumatized by the experience. “We wouldn’t do that to an animal,” she said. “I was horrified.”

In Canada, where abortion is legal until birth, this has happened hundreds of times; there is also documented evidence of babies being born alive and left to die after abortions in Ireland, the United Statesand the U.K. Planned Parenthood has been forced to admit in court that this happens. There are also those fortunate few who survived abortion and lived to tell the tale—one such survivor, Melissa Ohden, runs the Abortion Survivor’s Network, and told me in 2024 that she is in contact with seven hundred survivors worldwide.

There are still a few who possess moral clarity. When Lyle Shelton, an Australian politician and national director of the Family First Party, was asked whether the photo of baby Samuel “would cause distress,” he replied: “Yes, of course. The killing of unborn babies is very distressing.” The journalist asking the question, of course, was more concerned about the “distress” of people seeing the photo of Samuel than about his killing. This reaction is, in a nutshell, a microcosm of our perverse abortion regimes.

Thousands gathered in Brisbane on February 9, rallying “for Baby Samuel” and demanding justice. A few brave politicians added their voices to the cry, calling for change. Samuel’s life was short and ended in horror, but his only baby photo prompted anger from the sane and moral minority. “The world needs to see baby Samuel’s face and hear Amira’s story,” Howe told the Guardian. “When we choose to look away from the victims of genocide, the violence continues.” As pro-life activist Dr. Monica Miller once put it, babies like Samuel do not only have the right not to be killed—they also have the right to be seen, so that they can take their rightful place among us, if only in memory, as members of the human family.

 

Former Abortionist Now Prays in Front of Abortion Centers to Save Babies

National  |  Shawn Carney  |   Feb 26, 2026   |   10:39AM   |  Washington, DC

With Planned Parenthood’s flagship abortion facility in Manhattan closed, what does the 40 Days for Life team in New York City do now?

Laurie and her team have moved their vigil to Manhattan’s ParkMed NYC abortion facility.

Former abortion doctor and current 40 Days for Life director of medical affairs and education Dr. Haywood Robinson recently joined the Manhattan campaign in below-zero windchills and snow flurries for a prayer walk and rally.

Dozens of participants joined the vigil–including a large group that traveled from Philadelphia to pray.

That’s the sort of fortitude that can close ANOTHER facility in America’s abortion capital.

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“This is an outdoor sport!” Dr. Haywood told the group of about 80 hardy pro-lifers. “No matter the temperature, we still have to show up!”

While the 40 Days for Life team showed how God can close abortion facilities, Dr. Haywood bore witness to how God can change hearts.

“I spoke about my experience in the abortion cartel and testified to the goodness of God in my conversion story,” Dr. Haywood said.

Brooklyn, New York

Dr. Haywood’s visit to NYC then took him to Brooklyn, where he helped lead a discussion on abortion at a local church.

Abortion has devastated the black community, so Dr. Haywood was delighted that the vast majority of participants in the event represented the black community.

“The women were engaged,” said Linda, who leads the Brooklyn campaign. “They are open and ready for more discussion and information on abortion and healing from abortion.”

A deacon in attendance was also encouraged, urging Linda and her team to keep building and developing their 40 Days for Life campaign.

Bronx, New York

Nearly 100 pro-lifers–including four clergy and three doctors–attended Dr. Haywood’s visit to the Bronx.

The crowd was young and engaged. At least half spoke Spanish, so campaign leader Sol translated Dr. Haywood’s talk.

“The audience was very engaged as he elaborated on his deep love for Jesus,” Sol noted. “His message of salvation and abundant life through Jesus set the tone.”

Attendees were particularly galvanized by a question-and-answer session in which Dr. Haywood explained topics ranging from Abortion Pill Reversal to the Hippocratic oath to evangelization.

“What a moment of love and revelation for us to witness,” Sol continued. “We all left ready to fight [for life] more.”

Thursday, 26 February 2026

 

Leo XIV’s letter to an atheist in search of God

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Camille Dalmas - published on 02/26/26
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“He who loves God, he who seeks Him with a sincere heart, cannot be an atheist”: This is Leo XIV’s message in a letter to an atheist, published on February 24.

Since February 22, Pope Leo XIV has been participating in the traditional Lenten retreat at the Vatican with the main leaders of the Curia. It’s a time of silence, meditation, and introspection during which the Pope withdraws from public and media life. On Tuesday, February 24, however, Piazza San Pietro, the monthly magazine of St. Peter's Basilica, published a brief correspondence from Leo XIV in which he responds to a letter from a man named Rocco.

Rocco had sent him a poem titled “An atheist who loves God.” In it, the Italian acknowledges that he “believes that he does not believe,” but explains that he wonders about “the mystery of harmony” in this world and feels a certain “anxiety” at not being able to find God in his life.

In his reply, Leo XIV thanks Rocco for his letter and explains that his poem reminded him of a sentence from St. Augustine's Confessions: “You were within me, but I was outside myself, and there I sought you!”

“These words are enough to tell you that whoever loves God, whoever seeks him with a sincere heart, cannot be an atheist,” the Pope explains.

For Leo XIV, the “real problem of faith” isn’t actually “believing or not believing,” but rather distinguishing “between seekers and non-seekers of God.” God, he assures his correspondent, “allows himself to be found by the heart that seeks Him.”

“Someone can believe that they believe, without seeking the face of God, without loving him,” warns Leo XIV. And in the same way, he explains, “someone can believe that they don’t believe, and yet be an ardent seeker of his face.”

"You see, Rocco, we all long for Love, we are all seekers of God. And in this resides the dignity and beauty of our life," Leo XIV concludes.