UPDATE, DECEMBER 14, 2011: A child has been refused enrolment at Sacred Heart School in Broken Hill, NSW, because its parents are a lesbian couple.
The report from news.com.au:
“But in a demonstration of the challenges which same-sex parents and their children still face, the school’s decision to discriminate is probably not illegal, as churches are exempt from prosecution for breaches of the Anti-Discrimination Act.
One of the mothers told the ABC the principal had phoned her and said the women’s relationship and living situation was the reason the application had been turned down.
Trevor Rynne, principal of the Sacred Heart school, yesterday confirmed the girl had been rejected because of her parents’ relationship but declined to comment further.
“It’s a breach of the Anti-Discrimination Act, there’s no question about it. But a religious school is probably exempt from that breach,” said Stepan Kerkyasharian, president of the NSW Anti-Discrimination board.”
Bishop Kevin Manning stepped in: “To penalise a 5 y/o child because her parents are…homosexual…is just quite wrong.” But why was it allowed to get to that?
What you do in the privacy of your bedroom could have you fired, or expelled from school. That’s because the major religions don’t have to abide by the same anti-discrimination laws that you and I do.
The Churches can discriminate. Just mull how crazy that sentence sounds in your head. Your regular small business or large corporation (save for very reasonable and specific exemptions for disabilities in some areas) would be hauled to the tribunal if they even tried the same tricks.
Top Comments
Rick, it's all well and good smokescreening your article with phrases like 'what you do in the privacy of your bedroom could have you fired', but rather than sounding like a 'Today Tonight' or 'ACA' article, perhaps you should cut straight to the crux of the matter, which is, the Attorney-General, John Hatzistergos, has supported a 30-year old NSW law that allows private schools to expel gay students simply for being gay.
I agree, such a sentiment is appalling. But I disagree with your simplistic accusations of Church schools not wanting to employ a 'homo'. Or wanting the receptionist fired because she 'got knocked up'. That is so far from the truth, and so far from being helpful in a debate that deserves a far more considered approach.
Schools of all religious persuasions employ teachers of all lifestyle persuasions, and as in all human relations, it is not black and white. That you are insisting that it should be raises my hackles, and I'm sure those of others.
Bludgeoning the rest of society with a gay focused agenda is not going to achieve either change or engender respect. To the best of my knowledge, unless a teacher is openly expressing views opposite to a school's teaching policy, no school gives a rats what that teacher does, as you suggest, 'in the privacy of their own home'.
Top Jewish schools in Sydney and Melbourne employ secular, Christian and Jewish teachers. Christian schools across the country do the same. I can't speak for Muslim schools, but also agree to their right to employ whom they want as teaching staff. Forcing, through the instrument of government, the imposition of a standardisation of teaching staff, no matter what the school, is akin to Big Brother telling us how to think, how to vote and how to live.
I reject that.
Perhaps you should watch a few episodes of Father Ted! If this doesn't satisfy your curiosity I would suggest the classic Shogun series. With attention to the role of the Jesuits in trade and education.
"Give me the child, and I will mould the man."
"Give me the child for seven years,
and I will give you the man."
"Give me the child until he is
seven and I care not who has him thereafter."
"Give me the child till the age of seven
and I will show you the man."
St. Ignatius of Loyola, the founder of the Society of Jesus (Jesuits) or St. Francis Xavier, first missionary to India who assisted Ignatius in the formation of the Jesuits.