Human Rights

How some kids with a van are changing the pro-life movement

David Pomerantz

On March 13, in Dallas, TX, an organization you’ve probably never heard of is going to revolutionize the pro-life movement.

It starts with a kid from Philly, a bus in New York, and an idea that brought him quite by accident to the city where Roe v. Wade started — the city where he hopes abortion will finally meet its match.

David Pomerantz, 23, does not look like a pro-lifer or a practicing Christian. He looks like a vegan hipster with emo hair. As a matter of fact, he sort of is a vegan hipster with emo hair. If you visit his loft apartment in an industrial section of downtown Dallas, he will offer you fermented tea with organic honey. You can lounge in a beanbag chair and talk about art while he surfs his Macbook and plays indie music and talks about Jesus.

A polite, friendly young man with a laconic kid-from-nowhere accent and a direct blue gaze, David Pomerantz — “Dave” to his friends — does not jibe with the stereotypical image of the angry activist holding signs outside a clinic. And he doesn’t mind, because that’s not the kind of pro-life activist Dave is.

He hails from Philadelphia, but he was attending Word of Life, a two-year Bible institute in New York, when he met Chris Slattery and Julie Beyel of EMC (Expectant Mother Care), a Manhattan pregnancy resource center. He was astonished to find that EMC had formulated a “new model” for approaching women outside abortion clinics.

EMC had a bus equipped with a sonogram machine. By approaching women outside the clinic with the offer of free help, with no mention of a pro-life ideology, they were able to see a staggering success rate. In fact, by their estimate, about 70% of women who got on the bus for a sonogram decided not to abort. In one day, they saw nine women decide on life for their children.

They did some simple math, and realized that if this success continued, 15 to 25 women a week, or about 800 a year, would choose life.

Excited by the possibilities inherent in this new approach, Dave contacted his friend and mentor Joe Baker, who flew in from Philly to see the results firsthand. Equally impressed, the two began to ferment the idea that would become Save the Storks.

Dave was already planning on attending Southwestern Theological Seminary in Dallas, so he headed down south. With Joe Baker developing the art and marketing, and the generous help of Dallas-based organization Get Involved for Life and other private donors to bring to life a sleeker, smaller, more mobile ultrasound vehicle, they were off and running.

Save the Storks was born. Or, if you prefer, flown in through the window.

 

“We don’t want to intimidate anyone. We don’t want to force anyone. We just want to serve.” Dave is the Local Director for Save the Storks. Today, along with Daryl Harshbarger, Head Female Client Advocate, and Julie Beyel in town from New York, we are having pizza (some of it vegan) in Southeast Dallas. Dave is explaining to me why Save the Storks is a new kind of pro-life action.

“No one is offended by our activism,” he says. “We’re delivering a loving message in a strong way.”

Here’s what happens: a woman is walking up to an abortion clinic. She is approached by Dave or Daryl or another member of Save the Storks.

“Hi, how are you? Would you like a free ultrasound?”

This is the approach. There is no dangling rosary, no graphic pamphlet, no doom-and-gloom. Just an offer of free help from a non-threatening, friendly, smiling young person.

And then there is the Stork bus.

The stork was chosen as the mascot because of its comforting, unoffensive, nostalgic connection to motherhood and pregnancy. We can all remember old cartoons where a smiling stork would fly in a window and lay a swaddled baby in a crib.

What Dave and the others weren’t aware of until later is the text of Job 39:13-17.

The wings of the ostrich flap joyfully, but are her feathers and plumage like the stork’s?

She abandons her eggs on the ground and lets them be warmed in the sand.

She forgets that a foot may crush them or that some wild animal may trample them.

She treats her young harshly, as if they were not her own, with no fear that her labor may have been in vain.

For God has deprived her of wisdom; He has not endowed her with understanding.

This is the kind of thing that makes you whistle the Twilight Zone theme music.

The Stork bus, however, is free of all Old Testament references. It is a bright, lovely blue on the outside, and the inside is clean and free of clutter, with a welcoming but no-nonsense clinical feel. There is a little couch for the mother to sit on and speak to a counselor, and a padded bench where she can lie comfortably.

The ultrasound machine pulls out from underneath the bench. It is operated only by a licensed sonographer whose work is frequently reviewed by an OB/Gyn. In the back there is a small private toilet for pregnancy testing. It isn’t the slightest bit cramped or unpleasant; these mothers get only the best. The completed bus with the ultrasound machine was paid for by private donations to the tune of about $140,000.

The Stork bus is by no means the first mobile ultrasound vehicle — it was Chris Slattery’s mobile sonogram bus that inspired Dave and Joe in the first place — but it may be the smallest, lightest, and most practical. It doesn’t require a permit or special permission to park. It will fit in a parking space or even at a meter.

It is an abortion clinic’s worst nightmare.

 

So now this woman, who was going to go into an abortion clinic, is able to have a pregnancy test and a sonogram without ever reaching its doors.

But what happens now? She’s heard, “Yes, you’re pregnant! You’re this far along! There’s your baby! Here’s his heartbeat!”

So what does she hear next? “Good luck with that?”

Nope. Save the Storks is directly connected to Get Involved for Life and the two pregnancy centers it operates in Dallas, one uptown and one downtown. Also, needless to say, any expectant mother will be welcomed by whatever pregnancy center is closest to the bus at the time. The Stork team is prepared to call a cab for the mother if she needs a ride.

In other words, unlike the abortion clinic, the Storks and the pregnancy centers are in it for the long haul. They are going to get her what she needs to take care of herself and her baby, body and soul.

I don’t know about you, but I would be totally comfortable peeing in there.

“The heart of this ministry is the Gospel,” says Dave, after asking for more vegan marinara sauce. “There are two causes every Christian should take up: orphans and widows. This encompasses both.”

It is part of Save the Storks’ mission that every woman who steps on the bus hears the Gospel message. While this may seem off-putting to some, to the Storks it is an essential aspect of caring for the mother that goes along with the physical support and counseling she will receive through the pregnancy center.

“She is just as important as that child,” says Dave. “We aim to improve her quality of life… The major issue here is the devaluation of life, and the answer to every injustice on earth is the church of Jesus Christ.”

“Our ministry is designed to meet all the needs of the woman,” says Daryl. At the pregnancy center, every mother will receive whatever her personal situation calls for, be it help with affordable medical care, legal aid to escape from an abusive boyfriend, life skills counseling, mental health counseling, spiritual guidance, and more.

Which of course begs the question: if the Storks’ mission is in fact successful and Dallas pregnancy centers see 800 or so more mothers every year, how will they handle the added demand for resources?

The answer is simply: us.

“The churches need to stand up and start giving to their local pregnancy centers,” says Dave.

Without the generous help of good-hearted people giving what they can, pregnancy centers can’t work, and by extension neither can the Storks.

 

Daryl Harshbarger, Head Female Client Advocate. I don’t think it’s a requirement that you be extremely cute to be a part of Save the Storks, but it obviously can’t hurt.

Abortion clinic workers and management are used to seeing protesters outside their clinic. What they are not used to is a name brand.

The Save the Storks bus is slick, recognizable, welcoming, and — horror of horrors — it sits in between a mother and the abortion clinic doors. With a simple offer of no-strings-attached help — “Would you like a free ultrasound?” — and a bright, comforting image, it appeals to the desperate woman before she reaches the clinic.

She is not confronted. She is offered help. And while I firmly believe that virtually all sidewalk counselors and activists outside clinic are there for no other reason than to help women, the Storks are able to present help first. That is the key. The average clinic sidewalk approach is, of necessity, “Please don’t kill your baby. Here’s why. And here’s help.” Because they have their awesome bus, Save the Storks are able to say, “Here’s help. Now please don’t kill your baby. Here’s why.”

Because they don’t have to lead with agenda, there are no warning bells for a desperate and defensive mother. There is only a friendly face.

This new model will absolutely revolutionize the front lines of pro-life activism.

 

 

Joe Baker, National Director

What is the battle cry of the pro-abortion movement? “Choice!” It is their mantra. What do you constantly hear from abortion advocates? “These desperate women feel like they are out of options.”

Right here, on four wheels, parked in front of the clinic, is another choice — one they might not even know they have. Inside that bus is an image of their baby waiting to be seen. Connected to that bus is a support system — in short, options.

Dave and the team have high hopes, and they should. The approach is breathtakingly simple and, if early tests are any indication, profoundly effective.

As mentioned, the Storks take to the streets of Dallas on March 13. Meanwhile their website is up and running at SaveTheStorks.com with the purpose of raising money to take the program national. A Save the Storks bus is not cheap, and it takes people to run it. While Dave and his team get things off the ground in Dallas, Joe is in charge of building a national movement.

The thought of a Stork bus in every major city in America should bring a smile to your face. Every one of these buses represents hundreds of lives saved every year.

I have met Dave and the gang. I have been on board the Stork bus. And I have never been more excited about a pro-life idea than I am about this one.

You probably are having the same reaction I did. You are probably thinking: “What can I do to help?”

First: spread the word. Use Facebook, Twitter, Twitbook, whatever, to share with people how awesome this is.

Second: go to SaveTheStorks.com now and volunteer. They need all kinds of stuff — bloggers, artists, counselors, you name it — all across the country to be part of their national team of Save the Storks volunteers. Whatever your talent is, Save the Storks can probably use it to help get Stork programs off and running across the country. You — yes, you! — can be a part of this movement from the ground up.

Third: donate if you can. Save your Starbucks money for a few days and buy a ridiculously cool Save the Storks T-shirt. Wear it and tell people about it. (I promise they’ll be curious.)

In just a few days, Dave, Daryl, and their remarkable bus hit the streets of Dallas, the city where abortion rights were born. As a native Dallasite, I hope what started here is ended here. And I wouldn’t be surprised if Save the Storks becomes a major factor in helping Dallas — and the country — see an end to abortion.

_________________________________________________________

Kristen Walker is a writer and comedian who makes people mad on the Internet. She is Vice President of New Wave Feminists and enjoys taxidermy, yachting, and 19th century French poetry. Stalk her relentlessly for fun and profit.

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  • Sbpranger

    the point that really needs stressed to women going to abortion clinics to decide if they are going to get one or not that the abortion clinics are not being honest with them about anything like the future after having an abortion, the risks involved and the ultrasound they get at abortion clinics are of VERY poor quality and do not show the true detail of their child.

    • Didaskalos

      . . . not to mention the fact that these women are almost never offered, unless state law compels it,  a chance to see their abortion-clinic ultrasounds.  

      http://www.lifenews.com/2012/03/01/virginia-senate-ultrasound-bill-heads-to-gov-mcdonnell/  –  ”Seven states have laws that require an ultrasound for each abortion and require the abortion practitioner to offer the opportunity to view the image: Alabama, Arizona, Florida, Louisiana, North Carolina, Okahoma and Mississippi.”

  • Raven13

    I love this so much! Thank you for posting about this, Save the Storks sounds amazing! This approach makes complete sense when you think about it. I’m surprised this is  only now taking effect. God bless! 

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=1177875102 Rebecca Spotswood

    OH! I wanna do this!!!! This REALLY seems to encompass all aspects of what being pro-life is all about: TRULY helping women! Off I go to their website!

  • JadeSpartan

    I. LOVE. THIS. THIS is the kind of activism I would actually be a part of!!! Whenever I can make a trip to visit my mom in Malakoff, I’m going to make sure I find these guys and give ALL of them a great big hug!!! What an amazing idea! Well done!

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=744340119 Linda Patterson Baker

    This is amazing!!!!   I will be praying from Bolivia and hopefully donating to this.   

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=1261719338 Christin Nicole Boyce

    This article brings joy to my heart! I love it when people come up with more creative ways to truly help people and bring them to Christ! Praise God for Save the Storks!

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=40404298 Karen Cornelius Renneke

    I love this group of young people, who are putting God and life before themselves.  Truly unselfish and loving.  God Bless them all.

  • Kellyelovesyouu

    This is so incredibly amazing!!!!!!

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100001485371359 Grace Garner

    This is BRILLIANT! I’m donating! :D

  • Jordan Elizabeth

    That’s AMAZING! This makes me want to drop out of school and work on one :)

    And I think it was really funny how much Kristen emphasized that he is vegan

  • TERI COLBY

    It is wonderful to see the next generation taking up the cross against abortion! I pray for their success in doing God’s work! I was somewhat disappointed by the description used to categorize the movement that has been towing the line for the last 40 years. Forty Days for Life Campaign HAS revolutionized the way that we pro-lifers are seen. We do stand in front of the clinics and pray, some do have rosary beads. But we DO NOT intimidate the young women because we know very well that a conversion of heart needs to take place and that CANNOT be done if they are being attacked. Also, there are side walk councilors available with information and a free ride to the nearest pregnancy crisis center with a sonogram machine. Our rate of saving babies may not be as dramatic, but I can assure you that we are making a difference in these lives through prayer and guidance. Most of the women that sidewalk counsel (  including myself) have been in their shoes and that is priceless when you are trying to make a connection in a matter of minutes.  WELCOME TO THE MOVEMENT!

    • Kristen W.

      I have prayed at 40 Days for Life and been involved in the pro-life movement for years. The simple fact is, being able to offer the ultrasound before anything else is revolutionary. I am fully aware that virtually no one outside the clinic intends to intimidate women — I have been trained in sidewalk counseling — but it’s simply way easier to convince a woman to step onto a bus than to get in a car and go somewhere else. Save the Storks are not BETTER than the pro-lifers outside clinics right now; they just have a better approach through better marketing and better resources. God bless every last person in front of clinics and all the lives they save, but this new model WILL save more lives. I hope we can all join together to help it spread across the country.

      • teri

        Wouldn’t it be wonderful if we could get a piece of the PLANNED PARENTHOOD $500 MIL. Government pie to buy more of these vans to be used all over the country!..An idea who’s time has come.

        • teri

          a side note for anyone interested in getting involved in this life saving ministry.. go to http://www.fortydaysforlife and find out where you can go to stand in peaceful vigil as witness for the Culture of Life..

  • Letscook1

    I’m sorry but I’m very skeptical of the story. After Ted Bundy it’s hard for me to imagine a woman getting into a van with strangers. And most states have laws about people approaching women at clinics.

    • enness

      Legitimate organizations are transparent and researchable.  Unlike Ted Bundy, who claimed to be all sorts of people he was not (like chief of the fire department), they can prove who they are, and tell people where they plan on being and when.  The more visibility this gets, the less it will be a problem.

      Those laws are pretty obviously meant to target “protesters.”  These folks aren’t protesters.  They don’t even need to approach anyone, they could hold a sign.

      • David P.

        Couldn’t have said it better myself Enness.

  • Jobin Thomas

    This is amazing!!

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Michael-McCleary/1150151448 Michael McCleary

    Great!!! It is too bad the author had to make a lil’ dig at the Church with her “dangling rosary” comment.
    For the last couple of years, the Knights have been buying and placing free ultrasound units in area hospitals for this same purpose, but a van is a wonderful idea!

    • Kristen W.

      I am a Catholic. I love dangling rosaries. That was not a dig at the Church. It was a way of illustrating the point that abortion-minded women often see an agenda before they see an offer of help, and reversing the order of things is a powerful tool for reaching mothers.

      • http://www.facebook.com/people/Michael-McCleary/1150151448 Michael McCleary

        “There is no dangling rosary, no graphic pamphlet, no doom-and-gloom” that she lumped a beautiful and humble devotional prayer in with “doom and gloom” does show a slight, hopefully unconscious, bigotry on her part.
        As an ex-Protestant I admit this is sadly often the norm, and I only point it out so that this type of ignorance may be removed from this talented writer’s (and her readers’) thought process.

        • David P

          The writer of this article was Catholic. 

    • David P.

      We are actually working with the KOC right now, the writer who is Catholic was just trying to point out that we are strategic in sharing our faith;-D

  • Vairyangel

    So beautiful, I cried tears of joy while reading this article. God bless you all involved.

  • enness

    Awesome.  I can totally picture them outside our city clinic.

    Pomerantz is a cute vegan hipster with emo hair…is that silly of me?

    • Cute Vegan Hipster

      Thanks Enness;-D

  • Joe

    Thanks for all the encouraging comments!  And Thanks for such a great blog about Storks.  Ann and I are currently in China spreading the word.  We are so grateful for all of your support!  

    • Kathryn Taylor

      Hey Joe! I’m real excited to see this great article. Thanks for putting feet to the vision the Lord gave Dave and you!

    • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=1474900056 Christy Volanski

      Nothing inspires and gives hope like pro-life youth in action! God bless you!

  • Mike

    This is pretty gross. I appreciate that these guys “don’t want to intimidate anyone” and “don’t want to force anyone,” but I have a problem with a “23 year old vegan hipster christian” boy being the person who is offering an alternative to these women. Thanks for being respectful in your approach, but I think assuming that women who seek abortions haven’t thought the options over before choosing to go through with the procedure is pretty disrespectful in itself, regardless of the approach, especially when they are already being intimidated by the requirement of sonograms. Respect in your approach is a good place to start, but go a step further and respect people’s right to make choices for themselves.

    • MoonChild02

      A lot of women are actually pushed into abortion. They don’t choose it for themselves. Hence, the reason for the “options” counselors.  Those counselors never give them options like being helped with food, lodging, bill paying, job hunting, etc. like we do at pregnancy resource centers. The fact that there are women who turn around all the time when we offer help proves that there are many women who go to abortion clinics without being sure of what they want. These young adults are just offering women another view. The women can always go back later on in the day if they change their minds again. If they have their minds made up, they can still go in and see the abortionist. No one in this situation is forcing anyone to do anything.

      Besides, you’re forgetting, “It’s a woman’s prerogative to change her mind.” – author unknown.

  • Brtippin

    WONDERFUL!!!!!

  • Bob

    Come get in my van while I touch your lady parts….

    • David Pomerantz

      Seeing as its an ultrasound it has nothing to do with lady parts. 

  • Bob

    Come get in my van while I touch your lady parts….

  • Rose

    Wow, music to my ears!

  • pregnanthelpnow.com

    Letting a woman know that she does have choices is one of the greatest things we can do. God bless this man, and lets hope the various churches step up to the call he’s issuing them, imagine having one of these buses in every major city…

  • David

    I love this. I am gonna show it to my prolife group on campus

  • Jordan Elizabeth

    A friend of mine posted this article and a pro-choice activist commented about how great it was. It made me really happy :)

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  • http://twitter.com/scott_c_mclean Scott McLean

    I’d love to see #savethestorks trending on Twitter!

  • Falcao Cj

    Love ”Save the Storks ” movement …am going to buy their T-shirts for my whole family and spread the word …Thanks guys ..you really put a smole on my face !!!

  • Kathy

    After reading this I wanted to post tho on my Facebook page. I love what they are doing. Not only are theyworkIng to save the unborn child they’re working to save the mother of the child by reaching out to her and giving her the help she needs. They have their own website that is very informative about their cause. It’s my prayer there support will continue to grow and you’ll see one sitting outside every abortion clinic inthe USA!!!!!

  • Sarah

    This makes me sooo happy!!!

  • daynawrites.blogspot.com

    Wow. I served on the Board of Directors for a provincial Pro-Life organization in Canada for several years. One man on the Board spent most of his time trying to convince the rest of us to install an Ultrasound machine in the office, which was located directly across from the Abortion Clinic that saw half of the province’s 12,000 tax-funded abortions happen each year. The women were presented with NO other Options, and too often came out puking and looking devastated. For a number of reasons, we did not install that machine. He will be THRILLED to hear this simple, effective approach is in motion!! WELL DONE! 

    Yes, on behalf of the 100,000 little ones aborted each year in Canada, and their long-suffering families, THANK YOU.

  • http://www.facebook.com/katherine.hardacre Katherine Hardacre

    LOVE it!

  • http://twitter.com/pfcpremosgirl Aundria Premo

    This is what will save America! God bless this young man, and all of those heroes to the unborn! God will surely bless you….richly! :) Thank you!

  • jyladvik

    Being pro-choice means that you support ALL choices.

  • visitor

    God bless Save The Storks & I love the name! Thank you so much for doing this! It’s Awesome!!! =)

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  • mcsteve

    That’s Awesome!!! I’m going to order a T shirt n donate to their cause, anything to save the Mother’s n their unborn babies. I hope n pray that someday their organization will spread all over the USA, so that they will be an alternative to abortion. They would definitely be forcing the doors of the abortion centers to close, n will be able to bring an end to abortion in our country. God Bless your efforts, I will pray for your success in saving lives.

  • Citizen Ruth

    Will they raise and pay for the child as well? Awesome. Where can I sign up? Oh wait, I forgot, I am an atheist heathen.

    • http://twitter.com/Super_Sachiko Jasmine Clark

      why do they HAVE to raise and pay for every child they save? (how is that even financially possible?) they are simply saving lives. (these babies would have been dead if Save the Storks people hadn’t come in and saved them.) so you’re saying it’s not a good thing to save someone else’s life, unless you pay for that person’s life from now on?? wow, doctors, lifeguards, and emergency rescuers should not save the lives of people unless they pay for the life expenses of everyone they save. okay then.

      and what does atheism have to do with it? not all pro-lifers are religious, you know. and even religious pro-lifers (like me) have other reasons in addition to religion, for being pro-life. you bringing that up was irrelevant.