Objecting to Desmond Tutu Commencement Speech

Apr 13, 2012 19:39

Apparently some alumni of Ganzaga University (a Jesuit school in Spokane, WA) is scheduled to have Desmond Tutu deliver their commencement address. Some of the alumni aren't too crazy about the idea. Their beef?

Patrick Kirby, a 1993 Gonzaga graduate, said Tutu is pro-abortion rights, has made offensive statements toward Jews and supports ( Read more... )

ethics, religion

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Comments 6

tree_and_leaf April 14 2012, 10:46:48 UTC
I'm not sure I agree with him about abortion (I say I'm not sure, because I can't track down anything he's said on the subject other than praising the work of a clinic who I gathered do the full range of reproductive stuff, though I may be wrong on that, so I'm not sure precisely what his views are), I think ++Tutu is a great priest and a great human being, and generally one of the people who make me feel good about being an Anglican.

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tree_and_leaf April 14 2012, 10:48:19 UTC
Presumably they also object to the Pope inviting ++Rowan to preach? He's in favour of contraception, after all...

(I imagine the 'offensive statements about Jews' are criticism of Israel, which *head-desk*).

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marta_bee April 14 2012, 16:14:02 UTC
I know that Wikipedia isn't the most reliable source, but apparently he helped pass a law that made abortion legal in South Africa. Which sounds like exactly the kind of thing a Catholic group should find tough to swallow, until you look at the actual law - it is only given after twenty weeks if the child's or mother's health is in danger, and even after thirteen weeks there's a good deal of restriction. Taken in light of the rape epidemic in South Africa, this policy doesn't seem so unreasonable to me. Nor does supporting contraception in a country with South Africa's rate of AIDS infection.

What I find really frustrating about this isn't so much that Catholics would object to this record. Taken on its surface, I can see that problem. What bothers me is that this and only this is enough to disqualify a man of Tutu's stature in these people's minds. As I tried to explain to Radbooks below, this upsets me the way it does because it seems to say this is what matters when it comes to being a good Christian. That's discouraging to me.

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radbooks April 14 2012, 14:18:09 UTC
Why does this sort of stuff bother you so much? A very SMALL group of the alumni of a university (one I've taken classes at and whose basketball teams I follow!) are speaking out against having him speak, obviously not the whole campus in general or anything like that. There are always going to be people with different thoughts and ideas and they have the right to speak out - thank goodness they live in a country where they can do that.

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marta_bee April 14 2012, 16:05:48 UTC
You're right, it is a very small group and I do respect their right to say it. Free expression isn't the issue here, and like you I'm glad they had the opportunity to voice their opposition.

What bothers me is the suggestion that a person's stance on birth control and abortion is what matters when saying who should be honored by a Catholic group. It's a story that's been told so many times that I probably have a hair-trigger on this particular issue; when people object to someone on these grounds and only (or mainly) these grounds, it's like they're saying that's all Christianity should be concerned with.

Gonzaga has a special place in my heart because I almost went there as an M.A. student. That may be why I care so much. It's not that people voiced this position; it's that they held the position at all. To be honest, it shocks me that Desmond Tutu could be disqualified in even a small % of people's minds because he supported contraception and legalized abortion (with laws much more stringent than those causing outrage in the US ( ... )

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radbooks April 15 2012, 13:55:58 UTC
You should have come to Gonzaga, we could have seen each other because I'm in Spokane a lot! :)

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