Posts Tagged ‘East Carolina University’
Mixed Nuts at East Carolina University
At East Carolina University (ECU), students flocked to our Genocide Awareness Project (GAP). Some had unfounded claims, others brought quirky questions, and still more came with minds eager to learn. Here is a snapshot of the weird and wonderful!
Can a tomato really think? “If you are pro-life, you need to be a vegan.” There it was again — the well-worn argument posed to catch a pro-lifer off guard. CBR staffer Joshua Lindsey quickly challenged the young man’s statement, “Sure, you are still (technically) killing even when you eat veggies, but we all take it for granted that veggies can’t think.” Joshua stood in disbelief as he heard the young man’s reply, “Actually tomatoes can think. There is a book that says tomatoes can think.”
Knowledge is power. CBR volunteer Tony spoke briefly with Justin, a freshman. Justin admitted, “Abortion is crazy. I was pro-choice, but now being informed about it, I’m having different ideas of if it should be legal (or not).” No wonder the other side works so hard to cover up abortion; they know that once people see for themselves, the lies that justify abortion begin to crumble.
Who wants to cancel Halloween? A group of students approached the display and immediately proclaimed their feelings: “Your pictures are traumatizing and make us feel unsafe. They cause PTSD.” Quick to point out a double-standard, Joshua mentioned that there was a bloody hand picture in the student center advertising a movie for Halloween. He said, “That doesn’t upset you because it isn’t real. Abortion is real. If I asked for Halloween to be canceled (because some find it offensive), you would laugh me out of the room.” The student reported: “You WILL NOT cancel Halloween.”
The healthcare deception. A male nursing student was appalled. “I was trained to believe abortion was a good thing; that it was simply the removal of a clump of cells. I have been mis-taught and deceived.”
God is faithful to provide. Tommy encouraged us, “Yeah, these are big pictures, and you are doing a great work.”
Pro Life on Campus at East Carolina University
In October 2019, CBR headed to Greenville, North Carolina for a return visit to East Carolina University. We captured the attention of the campus for the two days with our Genocide Awareness Project.
Check out the press coverage of our visit:
Gems at East Carolina University
Here are some gems we found at East Carolina University:
Impressed upper classman. “This is the best thing I have seen on campus in all four years!” said an ECU senior. Here, here!
Brother-in-arms. Pro-life activists often share their own stories with us. A man who frequently walks and prays scripture around campus thanked us for being there. In the 1970s, soon after Roe v Wade, he used laminated abortion victim images to do his own pro-life activism. Many Christians and pro-lifers told him to tone it down, but he said “No way!” He’s our kind of man.
Too much or just enough? One student told us it was “too much”… at first. But after speaking with our Jane Bullington, he said, “I see what you are doing and respect your right to do it.” That was nice but the kicker was: “And yes, if this had just been a pamphlet you handed out, I would not be talking to you.” Exactly. Boy, our job would be so much easier if all we did was pass out pamphlets! But that doesn’t get the work done. That doesn’t engage the pro-aborts, fence-sitters, and even pro-lifers in a way that makes them want to come and hash it out.
Several African American students were touched by the pictures. Many of them spoke with Jane Bullington:
Look. See. Stop. Help. “I didn’t want to look, but I had to look,” she said. Jane asked her if she considered herself pro-life. She did. Jane replied, “Then I am glad you looked because when we realize how evil it is we will step into someone’s life and say, “Don’t. I will help you.”
The “but” gets folks killed. Another co-ed said, “They are little human beings. I wouldn’t, but …” The word “but” in this case is deadly, so Jane gently explained slavery “choice.” A lightbulb went off! “Well when you put it like that, I have just changed my mind. I understand what you are saying.”
Big and tall, small and frail. A big and tall young man was taken aback by the smallness and frailty of his fellow citizens. “Wow! I had no that this is what abortion was. They are so tiny! And that is a hand!”
Need to see. “It’s gruesome,” she said. “I didn’t know how developed it is so early. People do need to see. Maybe they will make different decisions.” It’s sentiments like that that will help to save the black community from pre-natal annihilation.
Conflicted to concluding. Another young woman was not so sure as her schoolmate. “It’s hard to look at, but I’m conflicted because it’s a woman’s body.” However as she spoke to Jane, she began to understand that it was another’s body and it was murder. “Abortion is a hard topic that people don’t want to talk about,” she said, “but we need to.”
Jacqueline Hawkins is a CBR Project Director and a regular FAB contributor.
Sorrow and relief
by Jacqueline Hawkins
At East Carolina University (ECU), a staff member stared at the first-trimester photos. Tears streamed from her eyes. CBR’s husband and wife team, Bill and Jeanette Schultz, reached out to her with comfort.
Twenty years ago, she had two abortions. She was young and unaware of the life growing inside her. She had no one to help. “If only someone had told me the truth,” she said.
After learning about the fate of her children, she felt deep remorse and sorrow. She sincerely hoped that God would forgive her. Bill and Jeanette assured her of God’s mercy and forgiveness. They encouraged her to see her pastor and ask God to forgive her sin and heal her heart.
By the time she left she had a smile on her face. The burden that she had carried for years was now a little lighter. She was on the path to confession, forgiveness, and healing. Isn’t that what the Cross is all about?
Jacqueline Hawkins is a CBR Project Director and a regular FAB contributor.
Rage and gratitude: A tale of two women
by Jacqueline Hawkins
She shouted, screamed and profanely vented her anger. East Carolina University (ECU) police officers were forced to intervene, stepping between this professor and CBR personnel. Students could see the uncivil, vitriolic reaction of this pro-abort, in living color.
“Why did you come to this University?” another female professor asked. Her reaction was completely different. At first she was surprised. After hearing more about our Genocide Awareness Project, she was thrilled beyond measure. She thanked us for coming to ECU because of her great concerns over self-destructive student behaviors, including Satanism, abortions, and fornication. She knew that great evil lurked on the campus, but that our presence helped to combat that evil.
Please help us do more of this.
Jacqueline Hawkins is a CBR Project Director and a regular FAB contributor.
“I have just changed my mind!” at East Carolina University
by Jane Bullington
Although words may say that abortion is evil, photos actually show just how evil abortion really is. Big difference.
Made them look. At our Genocide Awareness Project (GAP) at East Carolina University, a female student said it best, “I didn’t want to look but I had to look.” She was pro-life but had never seen the evil on display. Now, when a friend says, “I am pregnant,” she will be more likely to step forward to offer counsel and assistance.
“It (GAP) opened my eyes … ”
I have just changed my mind! Another student started by saying abortion might be a viable choice for other women, “They are little human beings; I wouldn’t do it, but…” A few minutes later, after seeing how slavery was a “choice” in the 1800’s, she exclaimed, “Well, when you put it like that, I have just changed my mind! I understand what you are saying.”
I had no idea. A male student expressed the sentiments of most college students when he said, “I had no idea this is what abortion was. They are so tiny, and that is a hand!”
College students are a microcosm of Americans in general. The vast majority have never seen and do not want to see the gruesome reality of abortion. We must confront that ignorance with real abortion pictures.
The need to see. Another student said “It’s gruesome. I didn’t know how developed it is so early.” She went on to say, “People do need to see this; maybe they will make different decisions.”
Opened my eyes. A communications major was quoted in the school paper, “It (GAP) opened my eyes to the situation; it gave viewers a different way to see it. The pictures were graphic but sometimes it may take that to get a point across, especially for something as big as life.” Common sense from a college student!
The smoking gun. Do you see a common thread? Disturbing photos of abortion victims pierce through the lies and deception to inform common sense and conscience.
Victim images have been the smoking gun for every successful social reform movement in our history. We must continue to put them in front of Americans, over and over and over.
Jane Bullington is a CBR project director and a first-time FAB contributor.
Pro Life on Campus at East Carolina University (ECU)
Although East Carolina University (ECU) has an undergraduate enrollment of >21,000, this was our first-ever GAP at ECU. By God’s grace and with your support, it won’t be our last.
ECU has no pro-life student group—we are taking steps to fix that problem—but their policies allow outside groups to reserve space on campus, so we did! Although our location was a good one (outside the Student Center), ECU is a huge campus and there is no one collection point for all of the pedestrian traffic. That made our Truth Truck all the more important, allowing us to reach many thousands of students who may not have seen GAP in person.
The campus newspaper coverage was excellent, and included a photo of our best GAP signs on page 1, above the fold! Items in the campus paper:
Here is a copy of the first news article, as seen, with abortion photos clearly visible on page 1 above the fold! See original here.
The second article was factually incorrect about one point. We did not pay a service fee to use the space. First, ECU did not set up the display nor clean up afterward, as implied by the article. Second, ECU officials asked us to move our event from the designated public forum (near the Cupola) to the location outside the Student Center. Since the designated public forum space is available free of charge, we incurred no additional fee by agreeing to ECU’s request. Finally, we would never agree to pay any security fee (to cover the cost of policing violent pro-abortion protesters), because that is a violation of the Forsyth County v. Nationalist Movement decision of the US Supreme Court.