Nearly 40 years after Norwayʼs last March for Life, about 1,000 pro-life supporters braved rain and winds to gather in Oslo on June 13 for a renewed public witness in defense of unborn life.
The event began with a rally at 11 a.m. in Seventh June Square before participants marched through the capitalʼs streets singing Christian hymns, concluding outside the Norwegian Parliament at 12:30 p.m. There, speakers from medical, social, religious, and political walks of life delivered addresses on the dignity and protection of human life, before the crowd joined together to sing “Navnet Jesus” (“The Name of Jesus”), widely regarded as Norwayʼs most beloved Christian hymn.
Marchers carry a banner reading “Marsj for Livet” (“March for Life”) through central Oslo, Norway, on June 13, 2026. | Credit: Bendik Bruun Edvardsen
Banners bearing slogans such as “A Voice for the Voiceless,” “Choose Life,” and “650,000 Since 1978” — a reference to the number of abortions recorded in Norway since the countryʼs abortion law was liberalized — defined the marchʼs central message: that every child has a right to life.
The discussion is not over
The march was organized by Velg Livet, a pro-life organization whose director, Cecilie Marie Røinås, told EWTN News the event was driven by a growing interest among younger Norwegians and a determination to respond to recent expansions of the countryʼs abortion laws.
“Since it has been around 40 years since the last major March for Life in Norway, we felt it was time for a new public witness,” she said. “With recent expansions of Norwayʼs abortion laws, it is important that we continue to be a voice for unborn life and not act as if the discussion is over.”
A young participant carries a “Velg Livet” (“Choose Life”) placard during the March for Life in Oslo, Norway, on June 13, 2026. | Credit: Bendik Bruun Edvardsen
The strong presence of young people behind the initiative, many of them in their early 20s, was, for Røinås, one of the marchʼs most significant features.
“The fact that so many young people are involved shows that the issue of abortion is not a lost cause,” she said. “We want to show that there are many in our generation who are willing to stand up for unborn life.”
Røinås said the marchʼs success would ultimately be measured not by attendance figures alone but by its impact on hearts.
“Our prayer is that people would experience Godʼs love,” she said, “because real change begins in the hearts of the people.”
A sign of growing engagement
Bishop Fredrik Hansen of Oslo, who was unable to attend due to pastoral commitments, described the march to EWTN News as evidence of a broader shift in Norwegian society.
“The Oslo March for Life attests to the increasing interest in and engagement for the defense of life and the dignity of life in Norway,” he said, expressing hope that it would become an annual event and serve to build bridges among the countryʼs pro-life organizations.
Asked whether he viewed the march as a form of healthy political advocacy or as genuine Christian witness, Hansen said it was both.
“The march will serve to witness to Norwegian society about the sacredness of life and to the need to challenge the many threats to life,” he said. “In so doing, it will send a firm message to our politicians and to the media that many Norwegians are deeply committed to a pro-life culture and wish their voices to be heard.”
He also pointed to what he described as quiet but real signs of religious renewal in a country better known for its secularism. “Interest in Christianity is increasing, notably among the young. Pro-life and broader social engagement is increasing in both the Catholic Church and other Christian communities, and public discussion on issues of life and faith are becoming more and more common.”
He closed with a direct appeal to Catholics abroad: “Remember Norway in your prayers.”
Unity among Christians
The Catholic Church was represented at the march by Catholics from several parishes, as well as Ragnhild Helena Aadland Høen, public affairs officer for the Norwegian Catholic Bishops’ Conference.
Høen drew an immediate contrast with the last such demonstration in 1986, which was met with large and sometimes violent counterprotests. “This time, we were allowed to walk in peace,” she told EWTN News.
For Høen, the marchʼs most striking feature was not its size but its unity. “Catholics, Lutherans, Pentecostals, and evangelicals stood side by side,” she said, describing this cross-denominational cooperation as “one of the most hopeful signs in Norway today.”
She also highlighted the participation of American worship leader Phil King, whose address centered on Christian unity: “The impossible is not impossible with Jesus.”
Participants walk under umbrellas in the rain, one holding a sign reading “For de Stemmeløse” (“For the Voiceless”), during the March for Life in Oslo, Norway, on June 13, 2026. | Credit: Bendik Bruun Edvardsen
Høen was careful to situate the march as a beginning rather than a culmination. “I have the distinct sense that God is gathering his people in Norway,” she said. “It felt like the opening lines of a new chapter,” one in which both Christian ecumenism and the pro-life movement, she believes, will continue to grow.
“I left with such a strong sense of expectation and joy,” she noted.
The fundamental question remains
Among the speakers at the Parliament steps was Ingrid Olina Hovland, chairwoman of the youth wing of Norwayʼs Christian Democratic Party, who was candid about the political landscape facing pro-life advocates in the country.
Pro-life politicians, she acknowledged, remain a minority in Norway and frequently face opposition from fellow lawmakers and the wider public alike. She explained that national debates have become too narrowly focused.
“The public discussion focuses primarily on healthcare and womenʼs rights while giving less attention to the unborn child,” she told EWTN News.
Hovland also challenged a common assumption underpinning arguments that economic hardship is a primary driver of abortion. Norwayʼs extensive welfare state, she argued, makes that case difficult to sustain.
“Even in a society with generous welfare benefits, the fundamental question remains: What moral value do we assign to unborn human life, and how should that value be weighed against other interests and rights?”
She expressed cautious optimism about the direction of her generation. Younger Norwegians, she said, appear increasingly willing to engage seriously with the moral dimensions of abortion rather than treating the debate as settled, a willingness that, for those gathered in Oslo on Saturday, the march itself was designed to reflect.

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