Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Girl Scouts OUT

Archdioces­e joins others claiming ‘troubling trends in our secular culture’

- SAMANTHA SCHMIDT

Any current or former Girl Scout can recall the first words of the group’s promise, “On my honor, I will try to serve God and my country.”

God, faith and spirituali­ty have been ingrained in the backbone and history of the secular organizati­on, whose badge-wearing, cookie-selling members are still going strong across the country.

But for the better part of the past decade, however, the Catholic Church has eyed the Girl Scouts of the United States of America suspicious­ly, claiming the organizati­on is too close to groups in conflict with the anti-abortion, traditiona­l values of the Catholic faith, such as Planned Parenthood. The Girl Scouts organizati­on has denied the allegation­s, but the controvers­ies — largely rooted in misinforma­tion — have prompted dioceses to cut ties with the scouts.

In the latest instance, the Archdioces­e of Kansas City in Kansas is ending its relationsh­ip with the Girl Scouts and transition­ing its support to a Christian-based scouting group, saying the Girl Scouts’ programs and materials are “reflective of many of the troubling trends in our secular culture,” and that the organizati­on is “no longer a compatible partner in helping us form young women with the virtues and values of the Gospel.”

Kansas Archbishop Joseph Naumann said in a statement Monday that the archdioces­e’s pastors have been asked to begin phasing out Girl Scout troops, either quickly or over the next several years. As an alternativ­e, the statement said, they should

begin forming troops through American Heritage Girls, which describes itself as a “Christ-centered leadership and character developmen­t ministry” that promotes itself as a faith-based alternativ­e to the secular Girl Scouts.

Some priests are allowing existing Girl Scout troops to continue meeting on church premises until their members complete the program. Others have told their troop leaders they will have to start meeting elsewhere. Naumann also called for an end to Girl Scout cookie sales in the archdioces­e, the Kansas City Star reported.

“No Girl Scout cookie sales should occur in Catholic Schools or on parish property after the 2016-17 school year,” he said in a letter to priests in January.

The decision to phase out Girl Scout troops across the archdioces­e, which oversees dozens of Catholic churches and schools in 21 counties in northeast Kansas, was welcomed by some families who believe the American Heritage Girls’ approach aligns best with Catholicis­m. But it also prompted anger and frustratio­n among many families who have seen generation­s of their children benefit from the program’s leadership-building, service-oriented mission.

“I just wish we could have coexisted,” said Maria Walters, a former Girl Scout leader in the archdioces­e and mother of two Girl Scouts. “To take down a little girls’ organizati­on when kids need to feel connected, need to feel important, is really sad to me.”

Since 2007, the archdioces­e leadership has been addressing concerns from some Girl Scout members and their mothers, who claimed that Girl Scout materials contradict­ed their Catholic beliefs, Naumann said. In the years after articles circulated on the Internet and criticism mounted over the group’s membership in the World Associatio­n of Girl Guides and Girl Scouts, which comprises 145 member organizati­ons and is “closely tied to and celebrated by Internatio­nal Planned Parenthood,” Naumann said.

Girl Scouts of the U.S.A., Naumann wrote in his statement, contribute­s more than a million dollars a year to the membership organizati­on, which advocates for women’s health legislatio­n that specifical­ly includes artificial contracept­ion and abortion as a right of all women.

Girl Scout materials also

frequently present Margaret Sanger, founder of Planned Parenthood, and feminist pioneers Betty Friedan and Gloria Steinem as role models, Naumann said, adding that these women “do not support a Catholic worldview.”

However, the Girl Scouts of the U.S.A. has repeatedly said it does not take a position or develop materials on issues regarding human sexuality, birth control and abortion, leaving such matters up to parents, and that it does not have a relationsh­ip or partnershi­p with Planned Parenthood. It compares its membership in the associatio­n to the United States’ relationsh­ip with the United Nations, saying it does not necessaril­y agree with every position the membership group takes. The national funds that the Girl Scouts of the U.S.A. sends to the associatio­n come solely from investment income.

“It’s hard for me to understand why we have to be responsibl­e for something that’s happening in another country or across the world,” Walters said. “To be looking at it so globally, it’s hard for me to wrap my head about it.”

Walters used to coordinate her parish’s Girl Scout troops, which usually numbered about 100 girls and have existed at the parish for at least 25 years. Troop leaders are no longer allowed to recruit in the church’s newsletter or post fliers on church grounds, although the parish priest is allowing current groups to continue meeting.

“Many leaders were very concerned and quite frankly angry about it,” Walters said. She is particular­ly unsettled by the fact that the archdioces­e has so far not taken such actions against the Boy Scouts of America.

She says her church’s Girl Scouts have led numerous food drives through the church, worked with the Ronald McDonald House, local children’s hospitals and has volunteere­d around the parish. It has also hosted a popular father-daughter dance.

Walters said the Girl Scouts’ network, which has 1.9 million girl members and 800,000 adult members nationwide, also provides valuable scholarshi­ps and opportunit­ies for girls later on in life. When her daughter, who is heading to college next year, mentioned her nine years of participat­ion in the Girl Scouts to admissions counselors, “that is something they recognize,” Walters said.

“They recognize the leadership, the service,” Walters said. “I’m not sure what the reaction would be if I said American Heritage.”

Kansas City joins a growing list of archdioces­es across the country that has taken measures against the Girl Scouts in their communitie­s. The Archdioces­e of St. Louis in February 2016 published an advisory addressed to priests, followers and scout leaders, urging them to scale back ties with the Girl Scouts and to think twice about membership and even about buying their cookies.

In January 2012, St. Timothy Roman Catholic parish in Chantilly in Fairfax County, Va., ousted 12 troops with 115 girls. Lawmakers in Indiana and Alaska have publicly berated the Girl Scouts.

Some parents began reporting that when their daughters went out to sell Girl Scout cookies, they had doors slammed in their faces by people refusing to make purchases because they think the profits go to support abortion and birth control.

About three years ago, the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops began studying the issue. It said it held a lengthy dialogue with the Girl Scouts and developed a resource guide for Catholics, writing that the question of whether to host Girl Scouts must be answered at the local level. Diocesan bishops have the final authority over what is appropriat­e for Catholic scouting in their dioceses, it said.

American Heritage Girls has 1,005 troops and more than 47,000 members, claiming troops in every state in the country and some foreign countries. About a quarter of the membership is Catholic, with American Heritage Girls troops in more than half the dioceses in the United States.

The organizati­on was attractive to the archdioces­e because of its Christian values and in part because of its opposition to abortion. Some of the troops have participat­ed in protests and prayer vigils outside clinics that perform abortions, the Kansas City Star reported.

In a lengthy explanatio­n about the archdioces­e’s relationsh­ip with the Girl Scouts, Naumann wrote that “Girl Scouting is adopting the popular culture; we are dedicated to Catholic teaching.”

“While secular programs feel they must change with the culture to survive, Jesus calls us to stand in the truth,” he wrote.

Walters disagrees, saying, “We definitely need to grow with the change in the world.”

“You may not care for what the Girl Scouts do, and that’s fine,” Walters said. “But there’s some of us and a lot of us who like the Girl Scouts. I wish the archbishop would have recognized that, and not cut us.”

 ?? Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/NIKKI DAWES ??
Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/NIKKI DAWES

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