Sentinel & Enterprise

Bishop punishes school over Black Lives, Pride flags

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WORCESTER » The Diocese of Worcester has told a local middle school that it can no longer identify itself as a Catholic school because it disobeyed the bishop’s order to take down its Black Lives Matter and Pride flags.

The Boston Globe reports that Worcester Bishop Robert Mcmanus told the Nativity School of Worcester in a letter this week that flying these flags in front of a Catholic school “sends a mixed, confusing and scandalous message to the public” about the church’s stance on important moral and social issues.

The school displayed the flags for more than a year before the bishop objected.

The school is a tuitionfre­e private middle school for boys in central Massachuse­tts, with about 60 students. Students had requested that the flags be flown.

The diocese said it was waiting until after the end of the school year to prohibit the school from identifyin­g itself as a Catholic school, an order that’s effective immediatel­y. Mass and sacraments are no longer permitted on school premises.

Thomas Mckenney, president of the school, said in a statement Wednesday that the flags simply state that all are welcome at Nativity and this value of inclusion is rooted in Catholic teaching. Mckenney added that flying the flags is not an endorsemen­t of any organizati­on or ideology, “they fly in support of marginaliz­ed people.”

Mcmanus published a letter in May about the flags.

He wrote that symbols that embody specific agendas or ideologies contradict Catholic social and moral teaching.

He took issue with the Black Lives Matter flag because he said “a specific movement with a wider agenda has co- opted the phrase,” promoting an agenda for schools with principles that are “queer affirming” and “trans affirming,” as well as disrupting the “nuclear family.” He said Pride flags represent support for gay marriage.

Flags that say “End Racism” or “We are all God’s Children” would be far more appropriat­e for a Catholic school, he wrote.

Nativity can appeal the bishop’s decision through the Jesuits who oversee the school.

The city of Worcester raised the Black Lives Matter and Pride flags to support the school, which vowed to keep flying the f lags to show solidarity with students, their families and communitie­s, the Globe reports.

June is also Pride Month, which is known as a celebratio­n of the LGBTQ community that involves parades and events.

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