LifeSiteNews.com – December 18, 2009
69 year-old student started to make religious themes in ceramics class which prompted college’s action
DALLAS, Texas (LifeSiteNews.com) – A Dallas area community college is facing a possible lawsuit if administrators fail to revoke a policy of banning art students from creating religious-themed objects. One teacher enforcing the policy is alleged to have gone so far as to justify the rule by saying that some find the Christian cross as offensive as the Nazi swastika.
Liberty Legal Institute, a legal advocacy group for religious freedom, sent a demand letter to Eastfield College administrators in the Dallas County Community College District on behalf of Joe Mitchell, a 69 year-old retired General Motors employee and resident of Dallas. For three years, Mitchell had enrolled in non-credit based ceramics courses at Eastfield without incident, until he began creating religious themed pieces, including crosses reflecting his Christian faith and a ceramics piece that included Jewish symbols for a Jewish friend.
The letter from Liberty Legal says that Eastfield began banning religious symbols with the arrival of Mr. James Watral, the Ceramics Department Chairman. When Watral encountered Mitchell’s Christian themed artwork, he instituted a formal policy singling out “religious items” and “seasonal pieces – Christmas, Easter, Valentines, Halloween, ornaments, etc.” as themes forbidden for art creation. Watral’s memo stated that “[t]he making of such pieces at Eastfield College demeans the goals of the ceramic program at EFC.” The policy ultimately culminated in a “no symbols” policy in Fall 2009 that in practice, Liberty Institute claims, was applied to only religious content. “Unfortunately, not everyone has the Christmas spirit or even a basic understanding of religious freedom,” said Kelly Shackelford, Chief Counsel of Liberty Legal Institute. “The government cannot ban crosses and religious symbols.”
Perhaps the most jarring incident for Mitchell occurred when Ms. Chris Blackhurst, a Ceramics instructor, is said to have told him that she would not fire two of his ceramics crosses in the kiln, because some individuals find crosses as offensive as swastikas. “I felt humiliated and that my spirituality was being demeaned,” said Mitchell. “The whole point of art is to express who you are.”




December 21, 2009
Don’t forget to get all you’re kids education savings funds to help pay for and encourage these guys. Remember, support them and you get a better job. Is there any wonder how they get so much influence?