Catholic religion teacher removed, investigated after lesbian couple complains
Two teens raised by a lesbian couple and
attending a Catholic school in Edmonton, Alberta have complained against a religion
teacher for allegedly telling the students in class that homosexuals can’t
reproduce and that they are not married according to Catholic teaching.
The Edmonton Catholic school board has now
removed the teacher from the school - temporarily, at least for the time being
- and launched an investigation into the allegations.
When students Tayler and Tyrus Allen told
their mom, Elyssa Allen, and her partner Leigh Sylvester, to whom she is
legally married, about the class given by 32-year veteran teacher Albert
Felicitas at Archbishop O'Leary High School last month, the couple decided to
take action, telling the teens to complain to the school principal, reported Edmonton
Journal.
Allen said that while she is aware that the
Catholic Church does not recognize her marriage, she "can’t accept such
overt anti-gay messages being taught," in the words of the Journal.
A number of Catholic students also from the
school told the Edmonton Journal that the words of their religious teacher
about homosexuality got them “fairly angry” and that they “didn’t sit well with
me.”
“It got me fairly angry. In these times, we
should be able to accept that homosexuals do exist and they should be able to
marry and do the same thing that straight couples do. It was very alarming,”
said student Mario Bacic.
LifeSiteNews contacted Edmonton Archbishop
Richard Smith, but spokeswoman Lorraine Turchansky said that the archbishop
would not be making any comment on the matter.
Felicitas said that the complaint about his
class was a “total shock” to him.
“I’ve taught the course many times … I have
received glowing evaluations from students,” he said.
Felicitas said he was simply teaching the
position on marriage and sexuality as put forward by the Canadian Catholic
bishops in a document.
Felicitas also protested the interpretation
being put on his remarks, including claims that he said homosexuals don't
deserve love.
"Everyone is made for love and to be
loved and everyone is capable of love, no matter what gender choice you have,”
he said.
When the Edmonton Journal asked students about
their opinion of the teacher, some complained about his “hatred of abortion,
even in cases of rape.”
The Catholic Church teaches that since every
life is sacred, and abortion is wrong in any instance, including in the case of
rape.
Spokeswoman Lori Nagy replied that the investigation
had been completed, but it would not release any findings.
“As with all personnel matters, we respect the
privacy of the teacher involved and do not release findings publicly,” she
said.
Felicitas told the Edmonton Journal two weeks
ago that being a math teacher in today’s pro-homosexual climate was safer than
being a religion teacher.
“Teaching religion, if you really want to
teach it properly, it’s risky. I’d rather teach math because five times five is
always going to be 25,” he said.