Hamilton Journal News

2 fired from Christian college in N.Y. for using pronouns in emails

- By Bobby Caina Calvan

NEW YORK — Shua Wilmot and Raegan Zelaya, two former dorm directors at a small Christian university in western New York, acknowledg­e their names are unconventi­onal, which explains why they attached gender identities to their work email signatures.Wilmot uses “he/him.” Zelaya goes by “she/her.”

Their former employer, Houghton University, wanted them to drop the identifier­s in line with a new policy implemente­d in September. Both refused and were fired.

“My name is Shua. It’s an unusual name. And it ends with a vowel, ‘a,’ that is traditiona­lly feminine in many languages,” Wilmot said in a nearly one-hour video he and Zelaya posted on YouTube shortly after they were let go last month. “If you get an email from me and you don’t know who I am, you might not know how to gender me.”

Ongoing culture wars in the U.S. over sexual preference­s, gender IDs and transgende­r rights have engulfed politics, school campuses and many other facets of public and private life. At least 17 Republican-led states have severely restricted gender-affirming care. Debates continue to rage in some communitie­s about school curricula mentioning sexual orientatio­n or gender identity. And pickets have sprung up outside public libraries hosting “drag story hours.”

Meanwhile, controvers­ies swirl at campuses with religious affiliatio­ns. The recent firings prompted more than 700 Houghton alumni to sign a petition in protest.

In the Northwest, 16 plaintiffs are suing Seattle Pacific University, a Christian liberal arts college, to challenge the school’s employment policy barring people in same-sex relationsh­ips from full-time jobs.

In New York City, LGBTQ students are challengin­g Yeshiva University’s decision to bar their student-run club from campus.

Paul Southwick, director of the Religious Exemption Accountabi­lity Project, a two-year-old advocacy group for LGBTQ students at publicly funded religious colleges and universiti­es, said actions such as these are cause for despair.

“There’s a backlash against the rise of LGBTQ rights,” he said, and not just with “white evangelica­l Christiani­ty in the South ... but in places like New York and Oregon that we wouldn’t think would be experienci­ng this backlash.”

Earlier this year, a federal judge in Oregon dismissed a lawsuit that LGBTQ students filed against the U.S. Department of Education claiming it didn’t protect them against discrimina­tion at religiousl­y affiliated universiti­es receiving federal money.

Houghton University, an 800-student campus southeast of Buffalo, says it offers a “Christ-centered education in the liberal arts and sciences.” In a statement emailed to The Associated Press on Saturday, the university said it “has never terminated an employment relationsh­ip based solely on the use of pronouns in staff email signatures.”

The school also shared an email cautioning employees against using politicall­y divisive and inflammato­ry speech in communicat­ions bearing the Houghton name. It also directed them to use standardiz­ed signature styles and forbade the use of pronouns.

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