Mount St. Mary’s University president: “This
is hard for you because you think of the students as cuddly bunnies, but you
can’t. You just have to drown the bunnies…put a Glock to their heads!”
Amid uproar
over comparing struggling students to bunnies that should be drowned or shot,
Mount St. Mary’s University president is now under fire for criticizing
expressions of the Catholic faith at the school.
Updated
on Feb 12, 2016 at 4:59 p.m. EST : Mount St. Mary's University announced that
school president Simon Newman has reinstated Professor Thane Naberhaus and
Edward Egan as employees, effective immediately. According to a statement
Friday, Newman said that they have his "solemn commitment to work together
to restore our relationship and our school." Mount St. Mary’s board member
Fr. Kevin Farmer also stated that despite calls for Newman's resignation, the
board "continues to support" him.
Already facing
turmoil, the second-oldest Catholic university in the country is now seeing
alumni and former faculty members publicly expressing their concerns over
President Simon Newman’s disparaging remarks about the college’s Catholic
identity – even reportedly calling some students “Catholic jihadis.”
Thane
Naberhaus, a tenured professor who was recently fired from the Maryland
university, told CNA that the president wanted to downplay the school’s
Catholic identity because, in his words, “Catholic doesn’t sell.”
“He said
publicly,” Naberhaus told CNA, “‘if you go in the marketplace, Catholic doesn’t
sell, liberal arts doesn’t sell.’”
Since late
January, Newman had been the focus of controversy. The school’s student
newspaper, The Mountain Echo, ran a story about the president’s alleged plan to
pursue the dismissal of 20-25 freshman students based on results from a survey
predicting their future success at the school. A number of faculty members
reportedly objected to the plan.
In the
article, a faculty member quotes Newman as saying, “This is hard for you
because you think of the students as cuddly bunnies, but you can’t. You just
have to drown the bunnies…put a Glock to their heads.”
Newman later
acknowledged to the Washington Post that he used the harsh words, saying that
the statement was intended only to acknowledge difficult conversations that
sometimes need to occur. The board of directors issued a statement calling his
words “unfortunate,” but standing by Newman as president.
Amid the
outcry that followed, a faculty member who served as an adviser to the student
newspaper was fired, along with Naberhaus, who was a tenured philosophy
professor and the director of the university’s honors program. He claims his
letter of dismissal charged him with disloyalty to the university.
Newman
responded to the backlash over the firings in a Feb. 10 statement to parents,
where he said the university was not responding with the specific details of
the firings in order to “take the high road.” He added that “it is critical
that you know that we would never undertake actions like that unless the
conduct in question warranted it.”
Mount St.
Mary’s University was founded in 1808, alongside the establishment of Mount St.
Mary’s Seminary. The seminary shares the campus with the school and receives
seminarians from various dioceses.
David
McGinley, a 2011 graduate of Mount St. Mary’s and a member of the Mount’s
College of Liberal Arts Advisory Board, had concerns following an Oct. 23, 2015
meeting between Newman and the advisory board.
In that meeting,
Newman “showed a lack of appreciation for or desire to continue or further
Catholic identity in any regards to what one would call traditional,” McGinley
told CNA.
“What he was
saying is that Catholicism has lost its relevance,” McGinley added. The
concerns Newman raised, he continued, were that Mount St. Mary’s was “not going
to get customers to come” if it marketed itself as a Catholic university.
A Facebook
group of concerned alumni and students, “Mount Family Speaks Out,” reported
that Newman made similar remarks in an August student assembly.
According to a
current administrative employee, who agreed to speak only on the condition of
anonymity, President Newman has also criticized the cross, saying in passing
that there were “too many bleeding crucifixes” in the employee’s office.
“I have a
broken crucifix, and I have a crucifix that is done in limestone sculpture,”
the source told CNA, adding that the president had made the comment after
seeing them.
Naberhaus said
that he has heard similar reports from other faculty members – including some
instances of the president disparaging the crucifix and using profanity.
Numerous
alumni also pointed to the Mount St. Mary’s landing page for prospective
students as an example of the new attitude towards Catholic identity, noting
that the page does not contain any references to the fact that it is a Catholic
school.
“That is Simon
Newman’s vision for Mount Saint Mary’s right there, encapsulated in that one
webpage,” Naberhaus said.
Naberhaus also
said that he has heard Newman refer to students as “Catholic jihadis.”
“He was kind
of dividing up our student body and seeing a certain fraction of them,”
Naberhaus said. “He seemed to think that there was a sizeable fraction of our
campus that fell into that camp, Catholic jihadis, and I never was sure exactly
what he meant by that, but he was definitely using that phrase.”
McGinley told
CNA that in his meetings with Newman, he was disturbed by other “derogatory
comments towards Mount students,” including a suggestion that some of the
students – largely those who had been homeschooled – were “judgmental” and
could pose “trouble” for the administration if they admonished fellow freshman
for partying.
Catholic News
Agency reached out to Mount St. Mary’s for comment. The university said that it
would comment at a future time.
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