Charisma News--Recently a pro-life
health-care clinic opened next door to Boise, Idaho’s Planned
Parenthood, giving pregnant women an alternative to the abortion
provider.
Now those in
Boise who object to the Girl Scouts of America’s partnership with
Planned Parenthood have a pro-life alternative to Girl Scout cookies.
That came about
when 10-year-old Grace Swanke, who loved selling cookies in Boise for
the Girl Scouts, found out about her organization’s involvement with the
abortion provider. The little pro-life home-school student couldn’t
abide that.
The Swankes held a family meeting to discuss what Grace should do to address the issue.
“She clearly stated, ‘Maybe I shouldn’t be a Girl Scout anymore,’” her father, John Swanke, told CBN News.
“And at that
point we asked her, ‘Well, what are the things about Girl Scouts you
like doing?’ And No. 1 was selling cookies,” he said.
Grace’s mother, Mary Swanke, then made a key statement about cookie-selling.
“I just mentioned to her, ‘Well, you could always do it for a good reason,’” she said.
Grace decided immediately that she wanted to start selling cookies for pro-life causes. Last year, she sold some 80 boxes and made hundreds of dollars, which ended up going to the Knights of Columbus.
They used the money to help buy an ultrasound machine for that Boise pro-life clinic, Stanton Health Care.
Then a few months
ago, Grace and her family saw Stanton staffers do a live ultrasound
demonstration on pregnant women. The girl fell in love with the
life-saving work of Stanton as she watched the little unborn babies
dance about on the ultrasound screen.
And she loved that Stanton bought the building next door to Idaho’s biggest Planned Parenthood.
“They’re trying to stop abortions right next to the largest center,” she said admiringly.
So this year,
Grace decided to make Stanton the recipient of whatever money she raises
from her “Cookies for Life.” So far, that’s approximately $3,300.
Unfortunately, it
would take selling many more cookies than Grace could bake on her own
to earn that kind of money, so she’s learned to reach out to her large
network of home school and Catholic friends and their moms.
She told CBN News she’ll put out the word, saying “Hey, we’re baking a thousand cookies. Can you come help?”
When CBN News
visited Grace, she and roughly 20 friends and moms had completely taken
over the kitchen and dining hall in a Boise Catholic church. The ovens
were jammed with hundreds of baking cookies.
Tables all around
the dining hall were covered with thousands of cookies on massive
cookie sheets. Girls were loading them as fast they could into large
colorful boxes marked “Cookies for Life,” or they were busy mashing down
dough into cookies that were next in line for the ovens.
Grace’s mother, Mary, came to help, standing next to her industrious daughter in the middle of this controlled mayhem.
CBN News asked Grace’s mom what she thought of all her daughter has put together.
“Of course I’m
very proud of her,” Mary said, and broke into tears, swooping her
daughter up into her arms, but making sure not to get cookie dough in
Grace’s hair.
Then Brandi
Swindell, founder of the Stanton Health Care clinic, came into the
dining hall to hear for the first time about that $3,300 Grace and her
friends are donating to Stanton.
She gasped and exclaimed, “No way! Are you serious? That’s a lot of money.”
Grace received yet another bear hug.
Swindell mentioned that a majority of Americans oppose abortion.
“This emerging
generation is more pro-life. And they’re not just the leaders of
tomorrow. They can actually be the leaders of today,” Swindell said of
today’s youth. ”And Grace is an example of that.”
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