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All eyes on us

Man at Large

Published: Tuesday, January 19, 2010

Updated: Tuesday, January 19, 2010 23:01

Last week's Viewpoint section was a flurry of activity. As most students are aware, an offensive comic ran, went viral, then national, and resulted in an atypical backlash against both the comics, the editors of The Observer and the University at large. Let me begin by saying this is not a column about Jay, Lauren, Colin or Kara, all of whom have been and continue to be my friends. Rather, this is an attempt to move onto the larger issue here, homosexuality at Notre Dame, and some of the issues endemic to this place.


Any conversation on this topic must begin with dorm life. For many students and alumni alike, the dorm system is the crown jewel of the Notre Dame experience. The single-sex dorms, seemingly bogus to students at other schools, create a sense of fraternity and lasting friendship. However, they are also fetid breeding grounds for rampant homosexual words, phrases and jokes. I can personally attest to the late night use of the "F" word thrown in all directions, whether at opposing sports teams, kids down the hall or even online video game opponents. It is a culture that is accepting for those oblivious to its shortcomings, and, I can only imagine, somewhat terrifying for those whom it targets.


How then, can this issue be fixed? After all, the dorm system is organic, based on random assortments of students from all over the world. The answer itself lies in this random, diverse group of students thrown together. Because of our university's strides towards diversity, ethnic and socioeconomic groups from everywhere are assigned as roommates, section friends and dorm members. For this reason, students are much more sensitive to racial issues, and as a result those types of slurs are catapulted across hallways and dorm rooms rarely, and not without consequence. It appears, then, that the University must become friendlier towards LGBT applicants, and make better efforts to encourage them to apply here so that students do not only experience racial diversity, but diversity across all walks of American life.


To this end, the University not only does not commit itself actively towards finding students from this group, it subversively discourages them from applying in the first place. This comes in two flavors. The first is the University's annual rejection of any Gay Straight Alliance's application for official recognition. While other clubs on campus, notably the Progressive Student Alliance, work within official status for change, this is not sufficient in demonstrating to prospective students the University's commitment towards LGBT issues. As a prospective student, I remember scanning the list of clubs and picking out which ones sounded fun or relevant to my interests. To imagine that prospective LGBT students are not doing the same thing and feeling discouraged to apply would be lunacy. In a way the Black Student Association or the Asian American association can provide for the needs of its members with official backing, why can a GSA not provide for LGBT students?


The second flavor of discouragement comes from repeated refusals by the administration to amend the non-discrimination policy, which governs both employment and attendance at this school, to include sexual orientation as a protected group. Thirteen years ago, the University prepared the "Spirit of Inclusion," a statement which made special efforts to welcome the gay community to Notre Dame. While this action is certainly appreciated, it lacks any real meat that would hold the University to its actions. The non-discrimination clause would put some conviction behind the words written in the statement.


In its rejection of both a GSA and an amendment to the non-discrimination policy, the University has cited Church doctrine, teaching, etc. Other critics have also been concerned with legal loopholes that would be opened by amending the non-discrimination policy. I am not a trained theologian by any stretch of the imagination, nor am I a legal scholar (despite taking Business Law). However, I have looked into the policies of a number of other major universities. It turns out that almost every university which I looked into, including our entire football schedule for next year, Georgetown, Loyola and even small Misericordia University in Dallas, Penn. is on board. This indicates to me that the legal and theological implications of changes at our university have been considered carefully at many other schools, and found to be quite appropriate and worth the price of change. To not make these changes will only cast a serious shadow over our university's attempts to be open and accepting in both word and action.


As this goes to press, the Progressive Student Alliance (a group to which I have no official relation) is circulating its petition to amend the discrimination policy. Last year, they were able to collect signatures of nearly 20 percent of the students, faculty and staff and were still denied. Please contact them to find out how you can get on the petition, as it appears this will have to go big if it is going to happen. Second, for any information regarding Church teaching and homosexuality, please hop over to the Notre Dame Core Council for Gay and Lesbian students Web page. In my four years, I have never felt an opportunity as strong as the one now to have a true dialogue at Notre Dame, and there is strong reason to believe that all eyes are on us.

 

Jason Coleman is a senior accounting major. He can be contacted at coleman.70@nd.edu
The views expressed in this column are those of the author adnd not necessarily those of The Observer. 

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16 comments

Lois King
Tue Jan 26 2010 20:13
Nancy, I understand that we are taught to follow men in robes telling us what to think and what is sin, and what is love. I've lived it too. But God requires of us a deep reflection about how we treat others. There is a lot of judgment in your posts. Are you condemning contraception, pre-marital sex, adultery, lust with equal vigor? Should we condone discrimination against those who use condoms, relegating them to second class citizens? The hypocrisy of the pick-and-choose sinner-labeling may have held up for years, but it is crumbling. We should all get right with ourselves and love glb folks deeply and embrace them as human while noticing the roadblocks they face with safety. You are a woman of God and that is to be admired, but are you kind enough to not cast aspersions or judge sinners . . .Let's develop some critical thought around these challenges. Notre Dame can be better.
Alice
Sat Jan 23 2010 13:04
Thank you - it's refreshing to see someone within the university publicly recognise that this is a systemic problem, and identify some key steps to address that. I only wish the university community as a whole would take those steps!
Your name
Thu Jan 21 2010 00:07
Nancy D., maybe you could answer some of the questions posed to you instead of just skirting the issue and diverting attention to other things.

This column isn't about the comic. It's about the University's discriminatory policies and the toxic environment its created for LGBT students, both current and prospective.

Nancy D.
Wed Jan 20 2010 23:03
No doubt, the purpose of this cartoon was to try to focus all eyes on Notre Dame.

"Intolerance of homosexuality is a major problem on Notre Dame's campus. We tried to address it in our comics-using the tool characters to emphasize a mindset that we simply find ridiculous."- from the apology

So we have the creator of the cartoon trying to make a statement about those who refuse to condone homosexual sexual acts by depicting them as a group that desires to promote violence and then, when all eyes are focusing on the cartoon that they intentionally created, they apologize for the inappropriate cartoon, but do not apologize for implying that those who refuse to condone homosexual sexual acts promote violence.

We are Men and Women, created in the Image of God. Defining oneself or someone else according to sexual orientation is demeaning.

When will The Observer remove the slanderous statement "Greg" made about our Pope?

Robert Lach, ND '88
Wed Jan 20 2010 20:41
This is not the first time that Christian charity has eluded the University. As a Notre Dame senior, I had a priest (a PRIEST!!) invite me to sing in a dorm revue a song ridiculing "fags and fat chicks". I declined and, deciding that the proof really is in the pudding and not the recipe, have taken my spiritual development to other traditions.
Greg
Wed Jan 20 2010 18:56
In the Pope's 2008 Christmas speech he called for the extermination of gays, because from his viewpoint they are the great threat to human kind's continued existance - such a good Nazi he is.

It appears Notre Dame is certainly continuing to create another generation of Nazi clones just like the pope.

Your name
Wed Jan 20 2010 17:34
Nancy D., who says Notre Dame would be condoning any sort of sexual act? Should Notre Dame discriminate against all sinners?

I'd like you to explain how not discriminating against people on the basis of sexual orientation translates to condoning sinful sexual activity (which, you know, extends to sexual activity of the heterosexual variety as well at times).

Do you have a point or do you just think gays are icky?

Your name
Wed Jan 20 2010 17:32
Uh, Matt, they were kicked off of the staff.
Matt Burtzlaff
Wed Jan 20 2010 16:53
What is more disturbing is the altercation of the cartoon. In the original version, it shows that the punchline read, 'AIDS' instead of 'A baseball bat.' The paper preferred 'not to make light of fatal diseases. The Observer made a dangerously misguided decision that promoting violence was somehow superior to making fun of HIV/AIDS. Yes that lame apology makes everything so much better. (insert sarcasm) Colin Hofman, Lauren Rose, and Jay Wade should be kicked off the Observer staff. This goes way beyond a mere (sorry we got caught) apology.
Nancy D..
Wed Jan 20 2010 15:24
The University of Notre Dame does not support hate crimes. What evidence do you have that they do or are you simply trying to slander the University of Notre Dame?
Nancy D.
Wed Jan 20 2010 15:14
"To not make these changes will only cast a serious shadow over our university's attempts to be open and accepting both in word and action."

Here are the Theological and Legal implications, both of which are grounded in Truth.
We should not condone any sexual act which is not consistent with God's intention for Sexual Love. We can not transform The Truth. The Truth, The Word of God, transforms us.
The Constitution does not provide for establishing a separate Personhood based upon sexual preferences.

Refusing to condone sexual acts or sexual relationships that do not Respect the Sacredness and Dignity of the Human Person is not discrimination.

James Seidler, 2002
Wed Jan 20 2010 14:57
The changes you outline need to happen. Notre Dame's discriminatory attitude toward gay and lesbian students and alumni is an embarrassment.
guest
Wed Jan 20 2010 12:42
These are excellent suggestions and I hope that the Notre Dame administration and community take them seriously. Thank you for the best letter I have seen on this subject.
Your name
Wed Jan 20 2010 12:03
Chicago12: The university didn't publish or promote anything of the kind. An independent student paper did. This has nothing to do with Christianity (frequently mocked by the student comics), but rather with a few students' lack of sensitivity.
chicago12
Wed Jan 20 2010 11:50
Leave it to a 'Christian' university to publish a joke about violence against gays.
I'm glad the nation got to see the bigotry that goes on at Notre Dame.

If a gay Notre Dame student is a victim of a hate crime...I hope they sue the school for promoting it.

Mitch
Wed Jan 20 2010 04:08
Very well put. I completely agree!






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