Los Angeles Times

Dodgers have disgraced their own history

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Re “Dodgers facing backlash over group’s Pride Night removal,” May 19

The decision by the Dodgers organizati­on to remove the Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence from its Pride Night celebratio­n goes against everything the team has stood for since it signed Jackie Robinson in 1947. How could the Dodgers change their program in response to complaints from people who are against what Pride Night is all about?

I am 74 years old and have been going to Dodger games since the team moved to L.A. I have been a quarterly season-ticket holder for five years. I have always felt so much pride in being a Dodger fan because of what this organizati­on has stood for all these years.

How could it now tarnish this reputation by listening to these people? Where would our country be if Branch Rickey had listened to the haters?

I say to the Dodgers: Don’t listen to the haters. Be the organizati­on you have always been. Do the right thing.

Debby Jeter, Dana Point

As a Catholic, I am saddened by the controvers­y involving the Dodgers and the Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence.

No Catholic will tell you that the church has always been kind to LGBTQ+ people. Dressing as nuns in habits, to me, is a way of using humor to cope with the pain of rejection by the Catholic Church and other Christian denominati­ons. We should have been kind to our LGBTQ+ brothers and sisters.

However, mocking nuns, Jesus and Our Lady is also a form of bigotry — toward Catholics. Would the Dodgers honor a group that ridiculed Judaism, Islam or any other faith? That took sacred clothing and other holy articles and treated them with disrespect? I hope not.

Sisters in various orders, real nuns, have dedicated their lives to serving others in schools, hospitals and elsewhere. They help the elderly, the poor, migrants and others who are ignored or marginaliz­ed.

I’d like to think that amid all this noise, someone in the Dodgers organizati­on thought about them. They don’t deserve to be ridiculed.

Karen Muehlberge­r

Green Valley, Calif.

So the Dodgers cancel the inclusion in their Pride Night of the Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence — a charity that uses humor to fight intoleranc­e — because some conservati­ve Catholics “object” to the group?

Brian Burch, president of CatholicVo­te, was “offended” by the lightheart­ed antics of a group that champions inclusion?

Well, I am mightily offended by the Catholic Church’s propensity to hide priests who sexually abuse children. Catholic dioceses in California have paid more than $1.2 billion in settlement­s to avert sexual abuse lawsuits in recent years.

Why does a part of the church have any say in our baseball team’s activities?

Melonie Magruder

North Hollywood

Burch’s hysterical “no other religion would be treated this way” statement suggests that he has either a very short or very selective memory, or maybe he’s just a propagandi­st.

Someone should remind him that it was a satire of Islam that led to the 2015 mass killing at the Charlie Hebdo magazine office in Paris. People died there for their right of free expression.

Burch’s overwrough­t, ignorant reaction, made in the name of his religion, could lead to violence. In this case, it would be against the LGBTQ+ minority that is already regularly targeted with hate crimes.

Thomas Bailey

Long Beach

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 ?? JUSTIN SULLIVAN Getty Images ?? MEMBERS of the Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence embrace as names of AIDS victims are read.
JUSTIN SULLIVAN Getty Images MEMBERS of the Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence embrace as names of AIDS victims are read.

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