Tens of thousands march for life in Rome

Pro-life demonstrators take part in the third annual national March for Life on May 12 in Rome. (CNS/Robert Duncan)

Pro-life demonstrators take part in the third annual national March for Life on May 12 in Rome. (CNS/Robert Duncan)

U.S. Cardinal Raymond Burke and U.S. pro-life leaders joined tens of thousands of demonstrators in Italy's third annual March for Life on Sunday, which ended with a personal greeting from Pope Francis.

According to organizers, some 30,000 marched along the route from the Colosseum to Castel Sant'Angelo, a distance of almost two miles. They followed a large wooden cross decorated with replicas of unborn children, and carried signs bearing messages such as "Let's not kill the future" and "Stop silent genocide."

Rome Mayor Gianni Alemanno and Maurizio Gasparri, vice president of Italy's Senate, were among the participants.

Many of the marchers had reached the end of the route by 11:30 a.m., when Pope Francis acknowledged them before praying the "Regina Coeli" in St. Peter's Square, at the other end of Via della Conciliazione from Castel Sant'Angelo. The pope called on the marchers to "keep the attention of everyone on the important issue of respect for human life from the moment of conception."

The pope also praised a petition drive in support of the pan-European "One of Us" initiative, which he said would "ensure legal protection to the embryo, protecting every human being from the first moment of existence"; and he noted the pro-life "Evangelium Vitae" pilgrimage, to take place June 15 and 16 at the Vatican.

After leaving the square, Pope Francis rode in the popemobile down Via della Conciliazione, where he was met by many participants in the march.

Jeanne Monahan, president of the U.S. March for Life Education and Defense Fund, took part in the Italian event, as did Lila Rose, president of the U.S. pro-life group Live Action.

The day before the march, organizers held a daylong conference at Rome's Regina Apostolorum University, featuring talks on bioethics by medical scientists and presentations by Cardinal Carlo Caffarra of Bologna, Italy, and Archbishop Giampaolo Crepaldi of Trieste, Italy.

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