Catholic school board uses Orlando massacre to push gay ‘solidarity’ on students
A Catholic school board in Ontario has used
the tragedy of the massacre of 49 people at an Orlando gay night club last
weekend to push the acceptance of homosexuality on students.
The Waterloo Catholic District School Board
asked all students and staff to wear purple shirts and for school flags to fly
at half mast on Thursday as a way to “stand up to homophobia and all hate
crimes” and to be in “solidarity with all LGBTQ persons.”
“It will also be a way to signal that we must
stand up to homophobia and all hate crimes, and give visible witness to our
faith which teaches us about inclusion, kindness and peace,” wrote Director of
Education Loretta Notten in a July 14 email to staff, students, and parents.
The Catechism of the Catholic Church teaches
that persons with same-sex attraction must be “accepted with respect,
compassion, and sensitivity,” but it calls homosexual acts “intrinsically
disordered” since they are “contrary to the natural law” in that they “close
the sexual act to the gift of life.” Like all Christians, the Church calls
people with this attraction to live a life of chastity.
The mainstream media and homosexual movement
have portrayed the shooting as an outgrowth of "religious fundamentalism,"
with many using the attack to criticize pro-family advocates.
However, as facts emerge, it's unclear that
the shooter, Omar Mateen, was even motivated by hatred of homosexuals. Mateen
was purportedly
a homosexual himself
who frequented gay bars and gay online chat rooms. The radical Islamist, who
pledged allegiance to ISIS during a 911 call in the middle of his rampage, had
previously scoped out several locations for his planned act of violence, including
Disney World, but ultimately chose the club
for reasons yet unknown.
While Mateen’s motives for the shooting have
yet to be determined, an emerging picture of the 29-year-old man reveals a
troubled individual who hated the West and everything it stood for and who
resorted to an act of terrorism to make his point known.
Parent Michelle Runstedler was outraged that
the board would use the tragedy to push the controversial political agenda of a
small minority on students while ignoring other significant tragedies happening
around the world.
“What about the 19 Yazidi girls who were
burned alive by their ISIS captors because the girls refused to have sex with
them? Where is the outrage over their deaths?” she wrote to education director
Notten in a June 14 email.
“Should we not stand in solidarity with those
who held fast to their morality and chose a horrific death instead of disgrace?
What about the Syrian Christians who are being targeted? ISIS attacked 35
Christian villages in Syria in February 2105. Why are we not standing in
solidarity with them – people forced to leave their homeland because they are
hated for their faith.”
Runstedler said that instead of wearing purple
shirts which accomplishes nothing, students should pray for peace.
“Ms. Notten, I would suggest that, as
Catholics, our call is to pray for all victims of hate and violence around the
world, regardless of color, religion, ‘orientation,’ or gender. Wearing a shirt
will do nothing to help victims anywhere. As Catholics, perhaps the school board
should be organizing real prayer vigils in which students really pray for peace
in the world. Prayer is, after all, the greatest gift we can give the world,”
she wrote.
The dress-up event was also pushed by
individual Catholic schools within the board.
Joseph Sciambra, who left an active life of
homosexuality for a Catholic life of chastity 16 years ago, criticized the
Catholic school board for having an event that catered to the modern gay rights
movement by using its language and symbols.
“First of all, I think it is wonderful and
noble for any Catholic to pray for those who died so needlessly in the Orlando
massacre, but a Catholic can do this without adopting the vocabulary or the
symbols of the modern gay rights movement.”
He took issue with Education Director Notten
tweeting support for the LGBTQ movement by making use of a rainbow colored
heart, saying that either she was “naive or she has an agenda.”
Sciambra said that it is a mistake to define
people with same-sex attraction solely by terms such as gay, lesbian, or LGBTQ
because doing so reduces them to be no more than the sum of their drives and
attractions, instead of being person created in the image and likeness of
God.
“As a Catholic educator, Loretta Notten should
know better,” he said.