Alex Schadenberg, executive director of the Euthanasia Prevention Coalition, attends the March for Life on Jan. 23, 2026. | Credit: Photo courtesy of Alex SchadenbergJan 23, 2026 / 18:14 pm (CNA).A broad range of life issues from abortion to euthanasia and more were represented at the March for Life 2026 in Washington, D.C., on Friday. Alex Schadenberg, executive director of the Euthanasia Prevention Coalition, expressed concern about a number of states across the country poised to legalize assisted suicide. "There are many states that the death lobby will be pushing for assisted suicide in 2026," he said. "In 2026 we are very concerned about Virginia, Massachusetts, Nevada, and Connecticut, and other states," he said, adding: "2026 will require a unified effort to stop the expansion of killing by assisted suicide poisoning." Ashley Kollme, a mother of five children from Bethesda, Maryland, shared the story of her pregnancy with her youngest daughter, Sophia, who is 2 years old...
Alex Schadenberg, executive director of the Euthanasia Prevention Coalition, attends the March for Life on Jan. 23, 2026. | Credit: Photo courtesy of Alex Schadenberg
Jan 23, 2026 / 18:14 pm (CNA).
A broad range of life issues from abortion to euthanasia and more were represented at the March for Life 2026 in Washington, D.C., on Friday.
Alex Schadenberg, executive director of the Euthanasia Prevention Coalition, expressed concern about a number of states across the country poised to legalize assisted suicide. "There are many states that the death lobby will be pushing for assisted suicide in 2026," he said.
"In 2026 we are very concerned about Virginia, Massachusetts, Nevada, and Connecticut, and other states," he said, adding: "2026 will require a unified effort to stop the expansion of killing by assisted suicide poisoning."
Ashley Kollme, a mother of five children from Bethesda, Maryland, shared the story of her pregnancy with her youngest daughter, Sophia, who is 2 years old.
"Sophia was diagnosed with a complex congenital heart condition when I was 23 weeks pregnant," Kollme said. "The first option that was presented to us was termination, and that was never an option that we would consider, and we chose life." Sophia has had two open heart surgeries and lots of other procedures, her mother said, adding: "And she is the light of our lives."
Kollme's two sons, Otto and Max, stood by with signs featuring pictures of their little sister.
Otto and Max Kollme hold signs for their sister, Sofia, at the March for Life on Jan. 23, 2026. | Credit: Madalaine Elhabbal/EWTN News
Gesturing to the posters, which featured a professional photo of Sophia, Kollme said the little girl is "one of the poster children for Johns Hopkins Hospital."
Ultimately, Kollme said, "I think that we see a lot of ableism and abortion against people with disabilities, and I've become passionate about that because every child deserves a life."
"Deserving life shouldn't be conditional upon one's health," she said.
Mara Oswalt, a March for Life participant from Atlanta, held a sign saying "Unborn children die in ICE detention" and emphasized the need to recognize the dignity of all human life. "I've heard several instances of women having miscarriages because they are not eating well, they're not being treated well in ICE detention," Oswalt said.
Maria Oswalt of Rehumanize International attends the March for Life on Jan. 23, 2026. | Credit: Madalaine Elhabbal/EWTN News
Oswalt serves as creative director of Rehumanize International, an organization dedicated to fostering a culture of peace and life in accordance with the "consistent life ethic," which calls for opposition to threats against human life including abortion, capital punishment, euthanasia, embryonic stem cell research, unjust war, and torture.
"Those stories in particular really break my heart," she said. "I know those women wanted their children. They wanted them to be cared for. And so I didn't want them to be forgotten in this moment."
Credit: JHVEPhoto/ShutterstockJan 23, 2026 / 18:34 pm (CNA).The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) announced on Thursday that it will stop funding research that uses fetal tissue of aborted babies.Dr. Jay Bhattacharya, National Institutes of Health (NIH) director, said in a Jan. 22 statement that the agency has "reexamined its approach related to the use of human fetal tissue in federally funded research.""This decision is about advancing science by investing in breakthrough technologies more capable of modeling human health and disease," Bhattacharya added. "Under President Trump's leadership, taxpayer-funded research must reflect the best science of today and the values of the American people."HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. cited ethical and scientific reasons for the change."HHS is ending the use of human fetal tissue from elective abortions in agency-funded research and replacing it with gold-standard science," Kennedy said in a Jan. 23 stat...
Pro-lifers hold their signs up at the March for Life Rally on Jan. 23, 2026. | Credit: Tessa Gervasini/EWTN NewsJan 23, 2026 / 18:54 pm (CNA).Thousands of pro-lifers attended theĀ 53rd annual March for Life on Friday in Washington, D.C. The 2026 event's theme was "Life Is a Gift," to invite "all people to rediscover the beauty, goodness, and joy of life itself," the March For Life reported. As attendees marched on the National Mall, they held signs, prayed, and sang their way toward the U.S. Capitol.Here are some of the best signs that EWTN News spotted at the march.
Sarah Hurm speaks at the March for Life on Jan. 23, 2026. | Credit: EWTN News/ScreenshotJan 23, 2026 / 14:23 pm (CNA).Pro-life speaker Sarah Hurm offered her testimony about facing her fourth unplanned pregnancy at a March for Life rally on the National Mall on Jan. 23."I am hear to tell you that abortion pill reversal can work. My life, and the life of my son, is living proof," Hurm, who is a Catholic single mother of four, said at the rally.Hurm described seeking an abortion. "The clinic had felt lifeless," she said. After taking the abortion pill, she changed her mind and found the abortion pill reversal ministry. "I realized ... I could fight for my child's life. And so I did," she said.Abortion pill reversal (APR) is recommended or dispensed by pro-life pregnancy centers to prevent the completion of an abortion shortly after a woman takes mifepristone to achieve a chemical abortion. The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) does not recommend the u...