I chose Mildred Jefferson for my VIP this week. She is a black woman who broke gender barriers and racial barriers to influence the
course of the United States. She was a brilliant, Harvard-educated surgeon. “She
helped found the nation’s oldest and largest pro-life organization” and gave “eloquent
pro-life arguments.” Her passion for the unborn “inspired some of the biggest
voices in the nation to speak up for the unborn.”
One of the people that Jefferson
influenced was then-California Gov. Ronald Reagan. He watched Jefferson on a
national television interview in 1972 and was converted to pro-life. He wrote
the following to her: “No other issue since I have been in office has caused me
to do so much study and soul-searching…. You made it irrefutably clear that an
abortion is the taking of human life. I’m grateful to you.” As President of the
United States, Reagan was “one of the most unapologetically pro-life presidents
in American history.” Jefferson and Reagan frequently corresponded with each other.
Jefferson blazed a trail for women
in several ways. She is so brilliant that she “earned her bachelor’s degree in
three years and was the first African American woman to graduate from Harvard
Medical School in 1951. She also became the first female surgeon at what was
then the Boston University Medical Center.”
Jefferson became “involved in the
pro-life movement when the American Medical Association decided it was ethical
for physicians to perform abortions.” Jefferson felt that this decision “violated
the Hippocratic Oath” and “helped found the National Right to Life Committee.”
She served as its president three times and “became one of the most visible spokespersons
for the prolife position in the nation.” She worked to change minds, and she
worked to change the laws.
The NRLC PAC, which she helped to form, is
“one of the most successful political action committees in the country
dedicated to helping elect pro-life candidates.” This PAC “has been
instrumental in stopping numerous attempts to advance abortion laws and in
passing laws to protect the unborn and their mothers.”
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