Gay and lesbian Catholic students in Pennsylvania are joining alumni
and others in pushing a Catholic high school near Philadelphia to
reinstate a teacher who was fired after he applied for a marriage
license with his partner.
The effort is one of several in support of Michael Griffin, who
was dismissed by Holy Ghost Preparatory School, and they include a
petition at Change.org that had drawn nearly 4,000 signatures as of
Friday (Dec. 13).
“Michael Griffin did not deserve to be treated in a way that does
not clearly reflect Christ and His teachings,” says the letter sponsored
by the Pennsylvania Student Equality Coalition. “He has dedicated his
life to the Holy Ghost Community. He is just as much a part of the Holy
Ghost family as any other member.”
Griffin was dismissed after a
Dec. 6 meeting with the school president, the Rev. James McCloskey, and
the principal, Jeffrey Danilak. Griffin had emailed Danilak earlier in
the week to say he might be late for an in-service day because he was
applying for a marriage license with his partner in neighboring New
Jersey, where gay marriage became legal earlier this year.
Even
though it was widely known in the school that Griffin — who had taught
at Holy Ghost for 12 years — was gay, and he often appeared at events
with his partner, McCloskey and Danilak said that by seeking to
formalize his relationship Griffin had formally violated his contract.
On
Monday, McCloskey posted a statement on the school’s website
acknowledging that the decision “has been difficult for everyone
involved — for Mr. Griffin certainly, but also for students, families,
faculty and staff, our alumni and all who are a part of the Holy Ghost
community.”
“We regret the pain that this has caused to any and all involved,” he added.
But
the priest said that because Griffin’s action violated the terms of his
teaching contract, “which requires all faculty and staff to follow the
teachings of the Church as a condition of their employment,” he had “no
choice” but to fire him immediately.
Several Holy Ghost alums are
also protesting. Former student Dan McQuade wrote a column in
Philadelphia Magazine saying the action would lead to reduced support
for the school, a private all-boys high school in Bensalem, Pa.,
operated by the Congregation of the Holy Spirit religious order.
“What McCloskey has done is tell gay students and alums that you’re
welcome in the community as long as you don’t ask for the same rights as
straight people,” McQuade wrote.
Another Holy Ghost graduate,
Zachary Nalbone, a student of Griffin’s during the 2006-07 school year,
also protested in a press release from the Human Rights Campaign.
“Mr. Griffin was one of the hardest-working and most dedicated teachers
who undeniably embodied the spirit of Holy Ghost Prep,” Nalbone said.
He “deserved a better end to his tenure as a teacher at Holy Ghost, and I
sincerely hope my alma mater will rectify this hasty decision.”
The
publicity over Griffin’s firing is likely to complicate efforts by
church leaders like New York Cardinal Timothy Dolan, who said this month
that the bishops have been “outmarketed” on gay rights and “caricatured
as being anti-gay.”
But it’s also likely that Griffin will not win his job back no matter how big the protests grow.
When
a teacher at a Catholic high school in suburban Los Angeles was fired
this summer for marrying his partner it prompted an outpouring of
support, including more than 90,000 signatures on a Change.org petition.
But the school maintained its stance and would not rehire the teacher,
Ken Bencomo.
Gay and lesbian teachers aren’t the only ones finding
themselves under fire. An unmarried couple in Lawrence, Mass., Sean
Houlihan and Natalie Ferland, were fired from their jobs as teachers at a
Catholic school after revealing that they were expecting a baby
together.
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