Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

'We will make this a circus' (Stop Obama: Randall Terry does Notre Dame)
The (Notre Dame- St. Mary) Observer ^ | 4/8/09 | Aaron Steiner

Posted on 04/08/2009 3:07:24 PM PDT by Mrs. Don-o

Radical activist Randall Terry brings his controversial pro-life 'battle' tactics to Notre Dame campus

This long-time pro-life activist is no stranger to controversy. His life - as an evangelical Christian, later a converted Catholic, once a Republican political candidate and foremost a warrior in the fight against abortion - has been filled with similar appalling actions.

Terry likes to boast that he's been arrested 40 times, spent a year of his life in jail and had cases before the U.S. Supreme Court. He even states that he has created "the largest civil disobedience movement in America."

Now, he's come to Notre Dame.

[Go to site and see the pics]

The decision to invite President Barack Obama to give the 2009 Commencement address at Notre Dame and receive an honorary Doctor of Laws degree has attracted the attention of pro-lifers around the country and world. Calling the situation a "travesty," pro-life leaders have denounced the University and its president, Fr. John Jenkins.

Terry said he first heard the news after a trip to Rome last month.

"When I was in Rome, I kept walking around, praying, and saying to people that were with me, 'The pro-life movement has been overrun, and we have no fall back line,'" Terry said.

Using a military analogy to describe his mission to end abortion, he explained that the movement needed a place where troops could regroup, where he could bring new troops into battle and "defend and launch offensives into the enemy camp."

"And when we came back, and I followed the news of President Obama's invitation, a light went off in my head, that, that's the line," Terry said. It was the "golden opportunity," as he called it, for the pro-life movement.

So Terry packed his bags and moved himself and his family - his wife and four children - to South Bend just a week after the announcement was made. And he's staying, he said, until the Commencement ceremonies on May 17.

"We've already got over 20 local volunteers, within the next 10 days we will have six full time staff on the ground. Many local alumni are bending over backward to help us because of their outrage at this," Terry said.

He and his supporters have wasted little time in organizing their response. Saturday, Terry held a press conference at the University's southern gates, and Tuesday he and some 20 volunteers protested at the Chicago offices of two University Board of Trustees members.

The protesters visited the offices of Chair of the Board of Trustees Richard Notebaert and University Trustee Arthur Velasquez.

"We held up large signs […] and we had a gentleman with an Obama mask. We put red paint on the cheeks of the Obama mask and all over his hands and then streaked the sign he was holding with finger blood, like a crime scene, and the sign he was holding said, 'Thank you for confirming me,'" Terry told The Observer Tuesday on his way back from Chicago.

Terry said that he arranged to have a personal meeting with Velasquez.

"We asked him to use whatever influence he could, to cancel Obama's invitation and to have Rev. Jenkins dismissed as the president," Terry said. He also said he asked Velasquez to pray to Mary.

"He would take a very strong message back to the Board," Terry said. A representative from Velasquez's office could not confirm the meeting late Tuesday.

Terry said, and a representative from the Chicago office of Notebaert confirmed, that Notebaert was not in that office Tuesday.

Now, Terry is shifting his focus to protests on Thursday and Friday. Thursday, his supporters will gather at the corner of Angela and Notre Dame Aves. at the University's gates to protest. Terry said he has coordinated protests around the country - including ones in Texas, California and Washington D.C. - on Friday.

Terry said this is only the beginning of protests from now until Commencement exercises in a few weeks.

"There's a whole plethora of things, some of which I'm not at liberty to discuss yet," he said.

One thing is certain, however. Terry will not shy away from employing whatever tactics he deems necessary to get his objectives - a cancellation of the Obama visit and the removal of Jenkins - accomplished.

"We will make this a circus," he said.

From salesman to activist

Terry said he hasn't always been involved in civil disobedience, nor has he always had such a strong faith.

"My upbringing was nominal Christian, practicing pagan," he said. But in 1976 he had "a very strong conversion experience" and became an evangelical Christian.

He attended Elim Bible Institute in Lima, N.Y., graduating with his diploma in 1981 "with academic honors as the president of the student body," he said.

In the years following, he was a practicing Christian and worked selling real estate and cars, he said.

Then, in 1983, he had an experience that led him to a full time job as a pro-life activist.

"I had a vision in a prayer meeting. I saw a scroll, it was a very unusual experience," he said. "We were praying, about ending abortion, and I saw a scroll rolling down with instructions on what I was to do, to fight against child killing.

"It had to do with protests, and sit-ins, it was a very new for me, I had no background in that type of activity, and I didn't share the vision with anybody, I just didn't say anything, I was so shocked," Terry said.

But after several months of prayer and study of scriptures, Terry said his mission to fight abortion became clear. He founded Operation Rescue, a pro-life organization, in 1984.

"And so I started standing in front of abortion mills by myself, I began to recruit people, I began to organize big events, and it grew and grew and grew," Terry said.

He soon became notorious for his large-scale events and extreme tactics. According to some reports, his protests in front of abortion clinics included him and hundreds of supporters screaming at pregnant women, tossing their bodies against car doors to prevent them from getting out, waving crucifixes and screaming "Mommy, Mommy" at the women. When Terry sent command, hundreds fell limp and blockaded entrances to the clinics.

Terry said that Martin Luther King and the civil rights movement has had a strong influence on his work.

"When I started my pro-life work, I realized that the pro-life movement did not have the impact that it needed if it was going to end child killing," he said. So he turned to a successful movement in America's past for inspiration.

"I watched a TV series called 'Eyes on the Prize,' about Martin Luther King and the civil rights movement. I read the letter from the Birmingham jail, […] I read Coretta Scott King's biography," he said. "I realized that if we were going to end child killing, we had to take our instructions from playbooks in the past that had been victorious."

Since 1984, Terry has been involved in numerous lawsuits, Supreme Court cases, the Terri Schiavo case - serving as a spokesman for the Schindler family - and the battle over gay marriage legislation in Vermont in 2000. The state Legislature legalized gay marriage Tuesday with a veto override, nine years after it became the first in the nation to adopt civil unions laws.

Terry said his experience in 2000 in Vermont provides a good corollary to his plans for the Notre Dame situation.

"In 2000, there were groups all over the country that were outraged at what was happening in Vermont," Terry said.

"They raised money on it, they sent press releases, they sent fundraising letters, but none of them sent staff or people on the ground in Vermont, none," he said.

He wasn't one to let the battle be fought from afar.

"I moved there, just like I moved here," he said. He set up operations and found volunteers, and claims that he helped change the bill "so it was not as bad as it would have been."

"The reason I did it was because I knew that what happened in Vermont would affect the nation, affect me. And it's the same thing with South Bend. What happens here will affect the entire nation, will affect the world," he said.

Bringing the 'battle' to ND

Terry has made clear his plans to use the Notre Dame situation for the benefit of the pro-life movement.

"[There] will be two great benefits, no matter what happens," Terry said.

"Number one is, there will be very few if any Catholic universities that commit this type of treachery in the near future," he said. "Number two is that we will so politically tar President Obama with the blood of the babies that he has condemned to die, that in 2012 he will not be able to seduce the Catholic and the evangelical vote like he was able to in 2008."

Terry was critical of the actions of Notre Dame students condemning the administration's decision, naming the Notre Dame Response coalition in particular.

The Notre Dame Response group has "proven that they are not equal to the task, and […] unfortunately, they are deluded and diluted in their response," Terry said.

Terry said that Sunday's prayer rally "was a very nice first step, but fell short of the level of outrage that should be displayed."

Leaders of Notre Dame Response have said they wish to respect the academic setting of the University. Terry said they aren't being strong enough.

"The timidity of the response does not reflect the gravity of the crisis," he said. "When someone is in the open defiance of the laws of God, you openly reprove them."

The "treachery" and "betrayal" associated with the Notre Dame situation brings together much that Terry says he has fought against in the past.

"We've been fighting against treacherous elements of the Catholic Church for years, and this crystallizes the treachery, the betrayal, the cowardice in a way that I haven't seen in years," he said.

That, plus the opportunity to further the pro-life cause, Terry said, has created "a golden opportunity for the pro-life movement to have a focal point of activity. Not whining, not cyberspace, not sending e-mails, but genuine culture war activity."

Elections and Supreme Court decisions aside, Terry said this situation "has the potential to rival" the impact of many of his past demonstrations and activities.

Terry described how opportune the Notre Dame and Obama situation is for his cause in this way:

"You have the most well-known Catholic university in the Western hemisphere inviting the most powerful political proponent of child killing in the Western hemisphere.

"That's all you need."


TOPICS: Culture/Society; News/Current Events; US: Indiana
KEYWORDS: abortion; bhocommencements; catholic; catholicschools; notredame; obama; prolife; protest; randallterry
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-2021-4041-6061-8081-97 next last
To: Guenevere

I hope that Notre Dame is flooded with protesters.


61 posted on 04/08/2009 9:52:51 PM PDT by TheFourthMagi
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 44 | View Replies]

To: stfassisi

And still he grins.


62 posted on 04/08/2009 10:03:16 PM PDT by TheFourthMagi
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 59 | View Replies]

I sincerely hope there is so much chaos and dissent on campus that the graduation is canceled. This is an appalling scandal. At the very moment Obama is plotting to compel Believing Catholics to kill or be accessories in the killing of innocent preborn children, this once Catholic university is proposing to give him an award. This is TRULY the work of THE ENEMY..
63 posted on 04/08/2009 10:07:27 PM PDT by Godwin1 (Cthol)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 61 | View Replies]

To: Guenevere
He craves the limelight!!!

Maybe so. Too bad more prolifers don't crave the limelight as well as he does. Maybe a few more lives would be saved. Somebody once warned against setting your light under a bushel.

64 posted on 04/08/2009 10:14:13 PM PDT by hinckley buzzard
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 7 | View Replies]

To: Guenevere
would recommend he stay out of the way.... ..and let the outraged citizens, Catholics, Protestants... all who value LIFE... lead this protest.... ...Don't let this be about Terry!

You have a personal problem with this guy don't you. Face it. Whatever beef you have with him is irrelevant here.

The Lord uses the most damaged of vessels to carry His message. And last I looked, we all better be praying for God's mercy rather than His justice, if we know what's good for us.

Talk about quiet respectful protests is fine but they won't impact the awareness of the public. And the body public needs a very serious wake-up call.

65 posted on 04/08/2009 10:24:47 PM PDT by hinckley buzzard
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 44 | View Replies]

To: hinckley buzzard
Good point. For years many have said to not pronounce the Right to Life too loudly, to not go for big Right to Life measures, to act ever so 'moderate'.

All a ruse to get real Right to Life advocates to push the Republican bus up the hill.

And now the abomination that is Obama is getting ready for FOCA, and is scheduled to be honored by Notre Dame.

And even now, pro-lifers are told to quiet down, appear 'moderate' et ceterwhatever.

Nothing moderate about killing babies via abortion. Pro-lifers need to oppose it and Obama like doing so was a matter of life and death.

Because it is.

66 posted on 04/08/2009 10:29:47 PM PDT by TheFourthMagi
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 64 | View Replies]

To: It's me; Mrs. Don-o
So the archbishop thinks himself badly used. Fine.

Perhaps Randy should have been more transparent and explicit about his plans (if he even had a plan at that time). Fine

But, the bottom line is that if all the bishops had been doing their jobs for the last 40 years, Burke would not have found himself in the position that he did.

One of the good ones (whose name I do not know), has said that the are going to have to do the work on this matter. What he did not say is that the majority of bishops will be in hunker down mode until this storm passes. (And I hope to be proven wrong on that.)

67 posted on 04/09/2009 4:08:11 AM PDT by don-o (My son, Ben - Marine Private First Class - 1/16/09 - Parris Island, SC)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 54 | View Replies]

To: Diago

He is to be commended for behaving as we all should.

The German people have the excuse that the nazis would have killed them if they tried to stop the murder.

What is our excuse?


68 posted on 04/09/2009 5:10:00 AM PDT by Notwithstanding (Member of the Long Grey Line)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 17 | View Replies]

To: hinckley buzzard; All
I realize my protestations are falling on deaf ears...

..hardly anyone here wants to see the distinction I'm trying to make between earnest, caring Catholics (& others) who hope to make a difference...

..and someone I fear is there to create a circus.

So be it.

I need not give my credentials in the pro-life cause to satisfy your accusations.... but credit me at least with not hiding my light under a bushel....because I haven't.

So be it.

69 posted on 04/09/2009 6:08:23 AM PDT by Guenevere ("He is no fool who gives what he cannot keep, to gain that which he cannot lose")
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 64 | View Replies]

To: Mrs. Don-o
Saving Notre Dame: "Terry" on! Our leader needs a fighter


70 posted on 04/09/2009 6:18:06 AM PDT by mlizzy
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Mrs. Don-o

I think Terry’s methods will backfire. He may have been a good tactician in the big Operation Rescue sit-downs, but he embarrassed himself and undermined Archbishop Burke’s valiant efforts from Rome when he (Terry), apparently without permission from the archbishop, posted an interview with Burke on YouTube. He seems to have little sense of the protocols of Catholicism. Converts (and I am one of them) need to take a few years to learn the unspoken principles and procedures before trying to be high-profile activists within their new home. That would be just as true if one converted from Catholicism to Pentecostalism or Mormonism or Judaism or scientism or whatever. If one wishes to be an effective member of one’s new group, one needs to study how it lives and breathes and work within it.

Terry will actually draw the focus away from Obama’s vicious adherence to the Culture of Death and toward himself. I wish he’d stay out of it. Plenty of others with plenty of pro-life street cred were already planning their tactics. If Terry had an ounce of humility and prudence, he’d quietly join them, disappear into their ranks and help them. But Terry has to be the leading light. This is not the first time he’s done that. It’s a pattern for him and suggests some character weaknesses.


71 posted on 04/09/2009 7:58:42 AM PDT by Houghton M.
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 49 | View Replies]

To: Mrs. Don-o
I won't criticize Terry for this. It's time to stop focusing on the faults of those who are on our side but who use different tactics than we do.

The enemy is Obama. Let's focus on him.
72 posted on 04/09/2009 8:37:30 AM PDT by Antoninus (Now accepting apologies from repentant Mittens.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Guenevere
Yes I am angry & embarassed with his antics.

Don't allow yourself to be distracted by him, then. You and he are fighting on the same side and have the same enemy. Terry's tactics are over-the-top, but now is the time to focus like a laser on the real enemy--the guy who will be on the podium and the so-called priest of God who invited him.
73 posted on 04/09/2009 8:39:52 AM PDT by Antoninus (Now accepting apologies from repentant Mittens.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 7 | View Replies]

To: annalex
Randall Terry is doing exactly what needs to be done, with both feet on the ground. We need more of him.

Exactly. If you don't like how Randall Terry does things in support of the same cause you support, then drown him out by being louder and getting more attention.

I'm through faulting him for being one of the few people to stand up publicly and say things that need to be said.
74 posted on 04/09/2009 8:41:46 AM PDT by Antoninus (Now accepting apologies from repentant Mittens.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 30 | View Replies]

To: Houghton M.
Oops, I don't think I made myself clear.

This is what I linked to, #37, the idea of a teach-in (faculty-led and even Bishop-led) and what I was asking your comment upon.

Here's one iteration of the idea:

I think a week-long teach-in on "What Pro-Life Means, from theological, philosophical, medical, ethical, and moral pro-life perspectives" and "Obama's Record So Far: Why It is Grotesque and Dangerous" and "Academic Freedom and the Catholic University" and related topics, could be creative and splendid.

It should be led (at least in a titular sense, but ideally, via real authoritative teaching --- it's the bishop's job) by Bishop D'Arcy, and supported by all the great people you mentioned, plus all 10 of the Holy Cross priests who signed the CSCC Priests' Public Statement against Honoring Obama.

I'm going to send this as a request to those 10 priests, plus D'Arcy. I reckon a snail-mail letter would reach them c/o the University of Notre Dame address, right?

What do you think?

75 posted on 04/09/2009 8:42:19 AM PDT by Mrs. Don-o ("By all that you hold dear on this good earth, I bid you stand, Men of the West" - Aragorn)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 71 | View Replies]

To: Mrs. Don-o

This sounds good.


76 posted on 04/09/2009 8:43:48 AM PDT by Houghton M.
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 75 | View Replies]

To: Kansas58
I have forgiven Randall Terry. YOU need to do the same.

Agreed. Until I am willing to put it all on the line like he has for a cause he believes in, I will refrain from criticizing him.
77 posted on 04/09/2009 8:45:42 AM PDT by Antoninus (Now accepting apologies from repentant Mittens.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 56 | View Replies]

To: Guenevere
I realize my protestations are falling on deaf ears... ..hardly anyone here wants to see the distinction I'm trying to make between earnest, caring Catholics (& others) who hope to make a difference...and someone I fear is there to create a circus.

What purpose is served you you focusing on Randall Terry who will be a bit player in all this? The focus of all of us should be on the true scandal of having a Pro-abortion, anti-Catholic president speak at Notre Dame and receive an award.

You may not like Randall Terry. You may disagree with his methods. In the past, I have felt the same way. But in our current situation, I'm willing to see past all that. Randall is on our side--we don't have the luxury of criticizing guys like him at this point.

Randall Terry is not the issue here. Obama and Jenkins are. Focus, focus, focus.
78 posted on 04/09/2009 9:02:31 AM PDT by Antoninus (Now accepting apologies from repentant Mittens.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 69 | View Replies]

To: don-o; BlackElk; HowlinglyMind-BendingAbsurdity; the invisib1e hand; Robwin; ethics; It's me; ...
I really like the idea of a Teach-In, maybe for a week before Graduation, and the Mary Ann Glendon (and others, IhopeIhopeIhope) addressing the Life-Death-Truth issues very competently, very pointedly from the platform. The splendid Glendon speak immediately before Obama.

And something strong and dignified from prolife graduates. Total silence, total solemnity (if it could be achieved), no applause --- wouldn't that be impressive?

I share some of the anxieties about Terry. I used to work for him (in the Manhattan and Atlanta campaigns of '88, thrill of victory, agony of defeat) and was glad when I left Atlanta, which ended up rather a mess.

Yet, while the rest of us potter about in our excess of meekness, yonder comes Terry flashing his excess of zeal. I could see, by some miraculous skin-of-our-teeth turn of events, a good outcome if the Graduation itself were solemn and sober, while simultaneously Terry (there's no stopping him, is there?) leads the disreputable fetus-loving rabble to Lepanto-outside-the-gates:

Risen from a doubtful seat and half-attainted stall,
The last knight of Europe takes weapons from the wall,
The last and lingering troubadour to whom the bird has sung,
That once went singing southward when all the world was young,
In that enormous silence, tiny and unafraid,
Comes up along a winding road the noise of the Crusade.

79 posted on 04/09/2009 9:11:58 AM PDT by Mrs. Don-o ("By all that you hold dear on this good earth, I bid you stand, Men of the West" - Aragorn)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 77 | View Replies]

To: don-o
One of the good ones (whose name I do not know), has said that the faithful laity are going to have to do the work on this matter.
80 posted on 04/09/2009 9:35:01 AM PDT by don-o (My son, Ben - Marine Private First Class - 1/16/09 - Parris Island, SC)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 67 | View Replies]


Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-2021-4041-6061-8081-97 next last

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson