Pope Francis Likens Abortion to Nazi Eugenics
Pontiff tells a family association that ‘to have an easy
life, one does away with an innocent.’
By
Francis X. Rocca
Updated June 16, 2018
4:28 p.m. ET
Pope Francis likened abortion to Nazi eugenics practiced “with
white gloves,” and said the only real families are those based on marriage
between a man and a woman, using uncharacteristically blunt language on two
controversial moral issues.
Addressing an Italian family association on Saturday, the pope
equated the contemporary termination of pregnancies in response to fetal
maladies or defects discovered through prenatal testing to the policies of
Hitler’s Germany.
Pope Francis says abortion is
'white glove' equivalent to Nazi-era eugenics
Pope Francis has denounced abortion as the
"white glove" equivalent of the Nazi-era eugenics programme and urged
families to accept the children that God gives them.
Francis
spoke off-the-cuff to a meeting of an Italian family association, ditching his
prepared remarks to speak from the heart about families and the trials they
undergo.
He lamented
how some couples choose not to have any children, while others resort to
pre-natal testing to see if their baby has any malformations or genetic
problems.
"The
first proposal in such a case is, 'Do we get rid of it?"' Francis said.
"The
murder of children. To have an easy life, they get rid of an innocent."
Francis
recalled that, as a child, he was horrified to hear stories from his teacher
about children "thrown from the mountain" if they were born with
malformations.
"Today
we do the same thing," he said.
"Last century, the whole world was scandalised by what
the Nazis did to purify the race. Today, we do the same thing but with white
gloves," Francis said.
The pope
urged families to accept children "as God gives them to us".
Francis has
repeated the strict anti-abortion stance of his predecessors and integrated it
into his broader condemnation of what he calls today's "throw-away
culture."
He has
frequently lamented how the sick, the poor, the elderly and the unborn are
considered unworthy of protection and dignity by a society that prizes instead
individual prowess.
He has also
decried how women are often considered part of this "throw-away
culture," sometimes forced to prostitute themselves.
"How
many of you pray for these women who are thrown away, for these women who are
used, for these girls who have to sell their own dignity to have a job?"
Francis asked during his morning homily on Friday.
Francis has
dedicated much of his pontificate to preaching about families, marriage and the
problems that families today encounter.
He is
expected to highlight these issues during his August trip to Ireland where he
will close out the Catholic Church's big family rally.
Ireland
recently voted in favour of softening its strict abortion laws in a referendum.
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