BlackFriars Volume II, Issue I | Page 4

RESPECT LIFE By Nicole Rocco We hope you are inspired by this young woman’s amazing story. Afterwards, she told us how she finds great joy in praying at Our Lady of Grace Monastery where Father Steven Boguslawski, O.P., is chaplain to the Dominican nuns. She also attends Mass at the Dominican parish of Saint Mary’s in New Haven. Thank you for your support of the friars who continue to tirelessly foster a culture of life! A little over twenty-four years ago, a twenty-year-old woman named Sarah was put in an incredibly difficult situation. She was raped. A few weeks later, her nightmare became reality when she realized that she was pregnant. It was already a struggle to care for her beautiful one-and-a-half-year-old boy, Michael, especially after his father died in a boat accident. Sarah started to question God, wondering how He could let all of this happen to her. Her family was completely unsupportive of adoption, so much so that she hid her pregnancy from them. Sarah made her decision alone–leaving the hospital with mixed feelings–but never once doubting that she made the right one. On November 1st of every year she would think of the little girl she named BlackFriars - Volume II, Issue I enjoyed friendships. They succeeded and they failed. Today, Kiana is a senior at Sacred Heart Academy. She is strong and sweet–a blessing to everyone she meets. She just finished applying to college and is an incredible soccer player. Jordan is now twenty years old. He just finished Air Force basic training a few weeks ago. He is witty and sarcastic and makes his friends and family laugh. And Nicole–that little girl called Elizabeth Ava at her birth–well, that’s me. I’m twenty-four years old. I just finished my Master’s degree in social work and I am looking for a job like many of my friends. We are a typical family and have always seen ourselves this way. About two years ago, a letter came in the mail that brought things full circle. It was from my little sister Anne, the sister I never even knew I had. With encouragement from my adoptive dad, I met Anne. Eight months after that initial meeting, Anne and I visited our birth mother, Sarah, and our brother, Elizabeth Ava and wonder where she was now. Elizabeth ended up being placed with a couple struggling with fertility issues. On the couple’s part, this was the culmination of eighteen months of waiting–from the time they applied for an adoption to when they were contacted and told that a birth mother was delivering a baby girl. Eighteen months of torturous waiting that other couples don’t have to experience. The couple moved baby Elizabeth into a modest house in Guilford, CT and changed her name to Nicole. Nicole’s parents adopted two more children after her: a baby boy named J ܙ[