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Eastern Mennonite University President Loren Swartzendrube
national
Christian college to discuss firings for ‘homosexual acts’
Students object, teacher resigns in protest
Published Thursday, 22-Apr-2004 in issue 852
HARRISONBURG, Va. (AP) – Eastern Mennonite University President Loren Swartzendruber has agreed to meet students to discuss the dismissal of two professors for “homosexual acts” and the resignation of another in protest.
Swartzendruber agreed to attend a forum at the request of a small group of students at the Christian school.
“We will not tolerate bigotry, poor language, inappropriate comments about persons of any sexual orientation,” he said.
Eastern Mennonite is a private school founded in 1917. Most of its 1,400 students are Mennonites, whose members are pacifists and adopt a simple lifestyle.
At EMU, students and faculty agree to a “community lifestyle commitment” that requires them to “refrain from sexual relationships outside of marriage, pornography, acts of violence, abusive or demeaning language” and the use of alcohol or tobacco.
Based on the Mennonite Church’s direction, EMU defines marriage as an institution between a man and a woman, Swartzendruber said. Swartzendruber acknowledged that the university fired two gay faculty members before he became president in July 2003.
The firings were because of homosexual behavior, not sexual orientation, Swartzendruber said.
More recently, the university did not rehire an openly gay faculty member whose contract expired, Swartzendruber said. The university, he said, decided not to rehire that individual for reasons unrelated to his sexuality. The faculty member has appealed the university’s decision.
“Some would say that the very act of dismissal is somehow violent, unkind, uncaring and unjust,” Swartzendruber said. “We are very careful in the process. We agonize. We spend a lot of hours in due process. We are not capricious in these decisions.”
Bible and religion instructor Kathleen Temple recently resigned in protest of the university’s decision to fire gay faculty and what she says is harassment of others on campus.
In her letter of resignation, Temple wrote that her decision was based on campus “disrespect toward women who love women and men who love men and harassment of those of us who want to ally ourselves with our lesbian and gay sisters and brothers.”
Temple added, “I find it difficult to do my work under the dread that another incident against sexual minorities could happen at any moment.”
Temple said she objects to the university’s close scrutiny of gay faculty.
“The scrutiny of private relationships seems only to have been applied to gay employees,” Temple told the Daily News-Record.
Katie Resendiz, who describes herself as “queer,” participated in an April 2 protest seeking the forum.
“It’s really hard to live in a community where you are watching other people get ridiculed or ostracized,” she said.
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