For the past few months, the alumnae of 91șÚÁÏ â in cities across the nation and from class years that span the decades â have taken leadership roles in opposing the the Health and Human Services Mandate that compels Catholic employers to purchase contraceptive, abortifacient, and sterilization coverage for their employees. Citing religious freedom and the Natural Law, these women have been powerful champions of the truth and defenders of the Church.
While proponents of the HHS mandate suggest that Americaâs women are uniformly on their side, and that opponents harbor misogynistic intentions, the alumnae of 91șÚÁÏ are proving them wrong. These intelligent, educated women â wives, mothers, and professionals â are letting their opposition to the HHS mandate be heard, championing truth through the exercise of reason, and leading the way. Below are five prominent examples:
Eve (Bouchey â97) McNeil
Among the 91șÚÁÏ alumni who participated in nationwide protests against the HHS mandate on March 23 was Eve (Bouchey â97) McNeil, who spoke at the Reno, Nev., event. âWe donât think Orthodox Jews should have to buy other peopleâs pork sandwiches. We donât think Quakers should have to pay for anybodyâs ammunition. The law that brought us out today is truly that extreme,â Mrs. McNeil told a cheering crowd. âThe United States Department of Health and Human Services has violated Catholicsâ right to their own conscience. They have decided that their opinion and their values matter more than ours. As a woman and as an American, I disagree!â
Yet the moment that generated the loudest applause was when Mrs. McNeil declared, âIf there is a âWar on Women,â it is a war on Lady Liberty!â
Angela (Andersen â87) Connelly
Another participant in the nationwide rallies against the HHS mandate was
Angela (Andersen â87) Connelly, a mother of nine and a member of the Collegeâs
Board of Governors. At a rally at Tollefson Plaza in Tacoma, Wash, Mrs. Connelly , âThis mandate is a challenge to the fabric, the core of our lives.â Moreover, she added, the fight against the mandate centers around âthe right to religion and to follow our conscience.â
Dr. Pia de Solenni (â93)
Following the Obama Administrationâs ostensible compromise to the mandate (which 91șÚÁÏ President Michael F. McLean rejected as ânot acceptableâ and âa distinction without a differenceâ), Dr. Pia de Solenni (â93) penned a for CatholicVote in which she wrote:
âPresident Obama has offered a so-called compromise on the HHS Mandate. Instead of forcing Catholic institutions to pay for insurance that covers contraceptives, insurance providers will be forced to cover contraception. Yep, same situation, just a different way of keeping books on it. Hmmm, when Enron was exposed, we called it accounting fraud, among other things. Bernie Madoffâs investment practices were denounced as a Ponzi scheme. But when the funny math is proposed by the White House, we call it a compromise.â
Later Dr. de Solenni appeared as part of a panel discussing the mandate at the Heritage Foundation in Washington, D.C. The panel, entitled , featured notable experts from various religious, womenâs, and public-policy groups. âThis goes much broader than most religious groups because itâs about freedom per se,â said Dr. de Solenni, owner of Diotima Consulting, LLC. âItâs about whether or not individuals have the rights to make decisions for themselves.â and a of the forum are available via the Heritage Foundationâs website.
Bekah (Sims â01) Andrews
âIâm a mother to daughters,â said Bekah (Sims â01) Andrews at the rally for religious freedom in Portland, Ore. âI donât want them to look at me and say, âMom, why didn't you stand up?ââ , Mrs. Andrews said, âWhat you choose to do with your life, thatâs your choice. Iâm not here to tell you anything about that, but please extend me the same courtesy.â
Bernadette (Morey â06) Moore
Bernadette (Morey â06) Moore and her children attended an anti-mandate rally in Fort Worth, Tex., where Mrs. Moore was quoted in a local news story. âThey try to talk it up, that itâs about contraception, and itâs not,â she told Fox 4. âItâs not a Catholic issue. Itâs a religious freedom issue.â