Zezé defines his pro-life work as “an apostolate.”
On March 7, Zezé cared for a pregnant woman who was abandoned by the father of her baby. “She was crying, she looked at me and I looked at her, I put my hand like that on her hand and I told her: I know exactly what this is, I know what you are suffering,” remembers Zezé, who was also a single mother. “So, putting yourself in their shoes and having lived this experience,” says Zezé, allows you to “extend your hands and help these women see that this moment is fleeting, that the pain is fleeting, that in a short time the baby will be born, The suffering, the feelings of abandonment, of loss, will be resignified with a smile, a hug from this child who will look and say: Thank you very much, mom! You said yes to my life despite everything.”
For the president of the Brazil Collaborative Network, activists who defend “the right of women to kill their own children are diminishing their rights.” “There is no empowerment when the posterity of the children that are fathered by these women is annulled.”