Notre Dame
Notre Dame President Refuses to Meet With Students Objecting to Inviting Pro-Abortion Obama
South Bend, IN (LifeNews.com) -- An ad hoc group of several Notre Dame students organizations says University of Notre Dame president, Rev. John Jenkins, has refused their request for a meeting. The students want to talk to Jenkins about his invitation to pro-abortion President Barack Obama to give the commencement speech next month and receive an honorary degree. The leaders of ND Response, a broad coalition of Notre Dame student groups founded to oppose the Obama invitation, sent Jenkins a letter confirming their interest in discussing their concerns with him. The students received word back that Jenkins would meet with them but only in a limited, closed-door fashion. The pro-life student group also requested that, before any potential meeting, Notre Dame officials release a statement signifying that the university will appoint a "pro-life ombudsman" to ensure that proper attention is paid to pro-life issues in both Notre Dame's teaching and research. "These requests were intended to lead the University into making gestures of goodwill that would facilitate our productive discussion and demonstrate President Jenkins" genuine interest in transparent dialogue," ND Response spokeswoman Mary Daly said. ND Response indicates that Father Jenkins has now sent a private letter to the 12 campus groups comprising ND Response in which he denied the students" requests for dialogue on the issues surrounding the university's invitation to President Obama. In the letter Father Jenkins wrote that "conditions for constructive dialogue simply do not exist" and that students could disregard his earlier invitations to meet with him. Ref. Source 1
University of Notre Dame (Hover)
Notre Dame's Obama invite riles bishops
Religious Based News
This coming week, Bishop Thomas Wenski of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Orlando, will take the unusual step of celebrating a Mass to atone for Notre Dame's decision to honor President Obama. Source: Faith & Reason: Top Stories & Community Feed
This should rile up the bishops, but it was really set in stone about the time of the Summer of Love. Dig on this MAN!
QUOTE |
In 1967, a group of Catholic educators, led by Notre Dame President Theodore M. Hesburgh, met at Land O'Lakes, Wis., and formally declared their independence from the Catholic Church. Alas, their motives were less than noble. Just two years before, LBJ's Omnibus Education Act had opened the floodgates to federal funding of higher education, and Catholic colleges wanted a place at the trough. Notre Dame quickly adopted a lay board of trustees so it could receive federal money, and only a year later the other shoe fell when numerous Notre Dame faculty and religious roundly denounced Humanae Vitae |
QUOTE |
Since announcing Obama's acceptance. Fr. Jenkins has been deluged with phone calls, e-mails, and letters denouncing his decision and requesting that he rescind the invitation. Within days, 160.000 people signed an online petition at notredamescandal.com and Notre Dame students began planning a series of events addressing Obama's policies that have already proven him to be the most pro-death president in U.S. history. Not that any of this will bother Fr. Jenkins. Notre Dame's administration these days is thoroughly intimidated by the increasingly left-wing and non- Catholic faculty, which apparently expects to be running the school within a generation. The reasons are simple. Consider the CSCs: The Catholic News Service incorrectly reports that Notre Dame is 'run by the Congregation of Holy Cross.' Sorry, that ended 40 years ago, when federal money required that the congregation not run the school. Moreover, vocations to the CSCs are dwindling to the point that, in 40 more years' priests on the faculty will be a rare anachronism. |
Text of Notre Dame Honorary Degree Praises Barack Obama, Excludes Abortion
South Bend, IN (LifeNews.com) -- The text of the honorary degree President Barack Obama will receive on Sunday at the Notre Dame graduation ceremony lauds the president on some political issues. However, it fails to mention Obama's extensive pro-abortion record and his faith to uphold the pro-life teachings of the Catholic Church. It says Obama's "historic election opened a new era of hope in a country long divided by its history of slavery and racism." "A community organizer who honed his advocacy for the poor, the marginalized and the worker in the streets of Chicago, he now organizes a larger community, bringing to the world stage a renewed American dedication to diplomacy and dialogue with all nations and religions committed to human rights and the global common good," the text reads. "Through his willingness to engage with those who disagree with him and encourage people of faith to bring their beliefs to the public debate, he is inspiring this nation to heal its divisions of religion, culture, race and politics in the audacious hope for a brighter tomorrow," the text concludes. However, when it comes to the human rights of women and unborn children victimized by abortion, there is no mention of Obama's record. Ref. Source 2
Obama tackles abortion debate
SOUTH BEND, Ind. - Amid a scattering of protests over his support for abortion rights, President Barack Obama addressed the issue head-on yesterday during his commencement address at the University of Notre Dame, calling for "open hearts, open minds, fair-minded words" in the pursuit of "common ground." Ref. Source 9
Obama Covers Up Pro-Abortion Record at Notre Dame, Heckled During Speech
South Bend, IN (LifeNews.com) -- After weeks of intense opposition and controversy surrounding President Barack Obama's commencement speech at the University of Notre Dame, Obama did what many observers expected him to do. He attempted to seek middle ground in the abortion debate and covered up his extensive pro-abortion record. Obama's speech began with another expected turn of events -- hecklers. As Obama began his graduation speech by thanking Notre Dame officials, a handful of pro-life advocates in the crowd stood up one by one and urged the president to reform his pro-abortion views. Four people, including Joseph Landry and Andrew Beacham, shouted "abortion is murder" and "stop killing babies" before being escorted from the auditorium by security officials. Once the president waded into the section of his speech reserved for abortion, Obama retreated to his pre-election rhetoric and sophistry by expressing a yen for a middle ground on abortion. Obama related a story about how a Christian, pro-life doctor emailed him about a comment on his web site saying Obama should "speak about this issue in fair-minded words." Obama said "fair-minded words" were missing from the abortion debate and that, while he "didn't change my position" on abortion after hearing from the physician, he rededicated himself to finding "common ground" on abortion. But Benjamin Clapper, the director of Louisiana Right to Life, told LifeNews.com after the speech that Obama has not been dedicating to finding common ground or using "fair-minded words" since becoming president. He said, "President Obama is saying one thing and doing another. By requiring the taxpayer funding of abortion overseas and embryonic stem cell research, President Obama's actions are anything but 'fair-minded.'" Ref. Source 6
Notre Dame President Gets Second Term Despite Honoring Pro-Abortion Obama
South Bend, IN (LifeNews.com) -- The controversy at Notre Dame University where the Catholic school gave an honorary degree to pro-abortion President Barack Obama and allowed him to give the school's commencement address apparently didn't hurt ND president John Jenkins' standing. On Friday, Jenkins was appointed to a second term as Notre Dame's president. The decision drew immediate condemnation from pro-life Catholics who are outraged that the educational institution went against the pro-life teachings of the Catholic Church. "Notre Dame has suffered terribly in recent years because of a lack of leadership and commitment to its Catholic identity," said Patrick J. Reilly, president of the Cardinal Newman Society. He told LifeNews.com, "The Board of Trustees has once again neglected their responsibility to uphold Notre Dame's Catholic mission by reelecting a president who has displayed public disrespect for the bishops and has permitted repeated scandals including the honors to President Obama." Father Jenkins was elected to a five-year term as president of Notre Dame on April 30, 2004, becoming the university's 17th president. Chairman Richard Notebaert announced last Friday that the University of Notre Dame Board of Trustees elected Fr. Jenkins to serve a second five-year term. Ref. Source 7