PROMOTING GAY CULTURE
Newton
case highlights promotion of gay culture in public schools
Gail
Besse Special to The Pilot
Posted: 12/8/2006
NEWTON — Like most
mothers, Emer O’Shea did not expect that her daughter would learn about
homosexual lifestyles in her third-grade classroom.
But in her Newton public school last year, she did. What happened is a lesson on
the need for more parents to find a voice, according to those fighting against
the erosion of parental rights.
More and more Christian parents are grappling with this problem nationwide, and
especially in Massachusetts, where lawmakers in July quadrupled the 2007 budget
to nearly $2 million for school programs aimed at “outreach to” and
“support and safety of gay and lesbian students.” Lawmakers also created a
permanent Commission for Gay and Lesbian Youth that will oversee how the money
is spent and is not subject to the control of any other department.
Half the Bay State population identifies itself as Catholic. However, three
publicized cases here sound an alarm that parental rights — their rights to
explain about human sexuality privately and within a moral context — can be
superceded by educators promoting the homosexual lifestyle.
These cases represent the tip of the iceberg, said a spokesman for
MassResistance, a Waltham-based parents rights group.
The O’Sheas’ story came to light in a Nov. 8 Newton TAB article by Tom
Mountain, a father with children in the Newton public schools and a columnist
for the weekly paper for four years.
“Cases like this could happen anywhere in the state. Newton has a strong gay
lobby, but what happens here today will occur five years down the line
elsewhere,” he said in an interview. Mountain predicted that as more states
protect marriage by constitutional amendment (there are now 27), homosexual
educators will naturally move to Massachusetts, the only state to allow same-sex
marriage.
“For every Emer O’Shea who sticks her neck out like this, there’s 100 more
who don’t — but want to. She was the first parent in two years who was
willing to go on the record,” he said.
What motivated O’Shea were the events that ensued after a Franklin Elementary
School social worker, explained about transvestites and transgenders to her
daughter’s class. The girl was confused and feared that her baby sister would
turn into a boy, according to the article.
A state law mandates that parents must have the chance to opt their children out
when discussions of a sexual nature will occur in the classroom. But school
officials said that parental consent did not apply in this case, as it was an
unplanned “teachable moment.”
Mountain didn’t buy that explanation, as the social worker was a former board
member of GLSEN, the Gay Lesbian and Straight Education Network, who specialized
in “integrating GLBT (Gay Lesbian Bisexual Transgender) issues” in the
elementary years.
For 10 months, O’Shea tried unsuccessfully to get assurances that similar
subjects inappropriate for children would not be brought up again. Finally, she
raised the issue publicly at a curriculum night for parents.
“That night nobody backed me up, but the next day at the school people thanked
me for bringing it up. I got calls and e-mails with the same message,” she
said in a Nov. 21 e-mail.
She credits a friend at her church, St. Bernard Parish, for giving her the
confidence to go ahead. “After the column came out I got a huge amount of
calls again, thanking me for bringing attention to what had happened,” she
said.
Meanwhile, however, she removed her daughter from public school and enrolled her
in a parochial one.
“I think people don’t talk out openly as they don’t have another schooling
option and they are afraid their child would suffer consequences if they speak
up.” When they do try and meet resistance, O’Shea said, they “become
resigned to the fact that they don’t have a choice or a voice.”
Speaking out is difficult. Both she and the journalist were publicly rebuked in
a Nov. 15 Tab guest column submitted by Rev. Richard Malmberg, pastor at The
Second Church in Newton, United Church of Christ, and chairman of the Newton
Interfaith Clergy Association.
“Gender configuration of the parents is irrelevant to what makes a family,”
he wrote. Rev. Malmberg charged O’Shea with “an attempt to derail a school
meeting to press her own agenda” and said Mountain had “reached a new low in
mean-spirited narrow-mindedness.”
Mountain said that it’s pressure such as Rev. Malmberg’s letter generates
that intimidates more parents from defending their values in the public sphere.
“Everyone expects everyone else to do it, and there is no one else to do it.
It’s just going to take parents saying they’re not going to take it
anymore,” he said.
Four other parents who have publicly spoken up against their young children
being presented with material by homosexual activists were David and Tonia
Parker and Rob and Robin Wirthlin. Both Lexington couples filed a federal civil
rights lawsuit in United States District Court in Boston in August against the
town and school officials.
Just how high the stakes are in the battle for parental rights became clear in
October, when their suit was opposed by the Massachusetts Teachers Union, the
ACLU and national homosexual advocacy groups.
Following the TAB article, Parker issued a statement through the MassResistance
Web site: “We have arrived at a time in history where school administrators
are preaching the gospel of human secularism to their captive audience in the
public classroom,” he said in part. “I don’t know what disgusts me more:
those who do this to children in our public schools or the parents who watch
silently and do nothing.”