Thousands march on Parliament Hill at annual National March for Life

People gather on Parliament Hill in Ottawa for the annual March for Life, May 14, 2026. (Photo by Peter Stockland, The Catholic Register, CCN)

By Anna Farrow, The Catholic Register

[Ottawa – Canadian Catholic News] – It took almost 25 minutes for the crowds gathered in Ottawa for the National March for Life to inch their way from the gates of Parliament Hill and turn the corner from Wellington to Elgin Street.

As in years past, people of every ethnic background, the very young and the very old, religious sisters and priests, families and church groups, carried their pro-life signs and walked the streets of the capital to sound the alarm for an end to abortion and euthanasia in Canada.

The day began with liturgies celebrated at Notre Dame Cathedral, St. Patrick’s Basilica and St. Clement Parish.

Ottawa-Cornwall Archbishop Marcel Damphousse was the main celebrant at the cathedral joined by Archbishop Ivan Jurkovič, Ukrainian Catholic Bishop Bryan Bayda and some 30 priests and deacons.

Provincial event in Regina – The 2026 Saskatchewan March for Life was held a week earlier, on May 7, 2026, sharing in the national theme “Follow Me” (Matthew 4:19). The Saskatchewan provincial pro-life event began with Mass at Holy Rosary Cathedral in Regina, followed by an Ecumenical prayer service, then a march to the Legislative Building for the reading of a pro-life declaration, prayers, and presentations. Related: Facebook images – LINK

Related: ‘God is on the move’ says Archbishop Richard Smith at Victoria, B.C. March for Life

Related: Media Conference held before the National March for Life: Speaker from Slovenia says fight for life can be won 

The national rally that preceded the March for Life started at midday in Ottawa. March for Life organizer Debbie Duval told the crowd, “We march on a Thursday, in Ottawa, because that’s when our legislators are sitting in the House of Commons. We want them to hear us. We want them to know we’re here.”

Matthew Wojciechoski, Project Manager at Campaign Life Coalition (CLC), which organizes the annual event, told the crowd, “We are here to call upon the members of Parliament to enact legal protections for all human beings from conception up to natural death. To remind parliament of four simple words, ‘Thou shalt not kill.’”

The March for Life always takes place in May to mark the month 1969 when the Omnibus Bill that decriminalized abortion in Canada was passed.

This year, the March for Life fell on the very anniversary of that vote. The theme this year was Jesus’ command, “Follow me.”

In his speech, CLC National President Jeff Gunnarson, asked the crowd to pray for CLC founder and former president Jim Hughes who, Gunnarson said, is in hospital with pneumonia and “not doing well.”

“Jim devoted decades of his life to the unborn and building this movement in Canada. Many of us are standing here today because of sacrifices he made long before we arrived,” Gunnarson said.

Featured speaker Aleš Primc, co-founder of the Slovenian political party Voice for Children and Families that recently forced a referendum to overturn the country’s assisted suicide law, led pro-lifers in a series of loud “hellos” to everyone from unborn children to “people with grey hair like me.”

“Saying “hello” is the start of recognizing our shared humanity,” he said.

Speaker Rebecca Kiessling, a US lawyer and founder of the organization Save the 1, a reference to the one per cent of babies conceived in rape, said she narrowly escaped “the death penalty” in the womb at two abortion clinics.

Kiessling was conceived by rape and has dedicated her legal career to advocating for the rights of mothers whose children were similarly conceived. She lobbies for abortion bans with no exceptions for rape or incest.

Born four years prior to the landmark 1973 ruling Roe versus Wade, she survived only because “the (existing) law in Michigan protected me.”

“I did not deserve the death penalty for the crime of the man who raped my mother. My mother chose abortion. I wasn’t lucky: I was protected. The law matters.”

When Conservative MP Arnold Viersen brought his two toddler children to the stage with him, his young son amused the crowd by peeking through the railing and jumping around loudly enough to be heard off the public address system.

The speeches on Parliament Hill and the march through the streets of Ottawa are the center point in a four-day series of events planned around the March for Life, including a candlelight vigil held the night before to pray and remember the babies lost to abortion, the Rose Dinner banquet on the Thursday evening and a Youth Summit to be held tomorrow, Friday, May 15.

Gunnarson summed up the question of why the March for Life continues year after year: “Sometimes this work can feel difficult, sometimes we feel that no progress is being made, but then we gather here and we remember that truth does not expire, love does not quit and courage inspires courage.”

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Canadian Catholic News (CCN) is a national news service, with members including Catholic newspapers, organizations, and individuals: CanadianCatholicNews.ca

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