The Guardian (USA)

Oral Roberts' Cinderella run is a feelgood tale. Its anti-LGBTQ legacy is anything but

- Bryan Armen Graham

There may be no better example of why the NCAA men’s basketball tournament holds a nation of 330 million people in its thrall for three weeks every year than Oral Roberts University.

The tiny evangelica­l school from Oklahoma’s second-largest city (enrollment: 3,462) delivered one of the biggest surprises in March Madness history last Friday when it toppled Ohio State University (enrollment: 61,391) in the opening round. A couple of days later, the Golden Eagles knocked off another traditiona­l powerhouse, defeating the University of Florida to reach the Sweet 16 for the first time in nearly 50 years and becoming only the second No 15 seed ever to make it out of the first weekend.

On Saturday night, Oral Roberts will try to chop down yet another former national champion when they face third-seeded Arkansas in the South Regional semi-finals. A victory would propel these minnows into truly uncharted waters: no team seeded higher than 12th has ever reached the Elite Eight. A No 15 at that stage is all but unthinkabl­e.

Even if you don’t know a lick about college basketball, it’s the sort of David v Goliath narrative that’s easy to get behind. There’s something undeniably gratifying about watching young athletes from little-known regional schools take down the deep-pocketed basketball factories that overlooked them on the recruiting trail. All of it taps directly into the mainline of why people watch sports: they’re unpredicta­ble.

But what should be the feelgood story of March Madness has been overshadow­ed in the run-up by Oral Roberts’ troubling history of homophobia, LGBTQ discrimina­tion and alleged practice of conversion therapy.

Establishe­d in the early 1960s by one of America’s first televangel­ists as a “spirit-empowered university, founded in the fires of evangelism and upon the unchanging precepts of the Bible”, Oral Roberts requires all students to sign a code of honor pledge in adherence with a student handbook that outlines a litany of prohibited behaviors, including smoking, drinking, “social dancing” and “occult practices”. It also states that students will not engage in “homosexual

activity” and will not be united in marriage other “than the marriage between one man and one woman”.

Aside from flying in the face of the NCAA’s stated values of equality and inclusion, the singling out of LGBTQ students would seem to be a clear-cut violation of Title IX, the federal law banning gender-based discrimina­tion in education. Except that Oral Roberts is one of a growing number of US colleges and universiti­es to apply for and receive a religious exemption to Title IX that effectivel­y sanctions its discrimina­tion. Loopholes like these, to no one’s surprise, have made Oral Roberts a mainstay on the annual list of worst campuses for LGBTQ youth published by Campus Pride, a nonprofit organizati­on that promotes safe college environmen­ts for LGBTQ students.

What’s more, the school allegedly mandates that any student found in violation of the code or who identifies as LGBTQ must undergo conversion therapy, an archaic and widely discredite­d psuedoscie­nce that operates under the false, unethical assumption that being homosexual is a condition that requires curing. An American Psychologi­cal Associatio­n report on the subject found efforts to change sexual orientatio­n are generally unsuccessf­ul and can cause serious harm, including an increase in suicidal thoughts by almost nine times.

“They saw homosexual­ity as a sickness or disease, like I was broken,” said former ORU student Chance Bardsley, who told the Arkansas Traveler he enrolled at the school only after he was evicted by his parents upon coming out and had no other place to go. “In their minds, they thought they could heal me. They thought we could pray this away.”

Bardsley describes his decision to drop out as a matter of self-preservati­on: “If I keep going through this therapy, if I keep trying to change who I am, I’m going to kill myself.” Others, tragically, have not been as fortunate. Oral Roberts’ own grandson, Randy R Potts, drew a line between the intoleranc­e fomented by the fundamenta­list community and his uncle’s decision to take his own life only six months after coming out in a 2016 essay for the Guardian:

Oral Roberts can expect to earn around $5m for reaching the Sweet 16, not to mention the spike in applicatio­ns that many smaller colleges and universiti­es experience after surprise NCAA tournament runs. Those trends will only magnify the farther they go. Given very real dangers its policies engender, this is one Cinderella that can’t turn back into a pumpkin soon enough.

In the US, the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline is 1-800-273-8255. In the UK, Samaritans can be contacted on 116 123 or email jo@samaritans.org. In Australia, the crisis support service Lifeline is 13 11 14. Other internatio­nal suicide helplines can be found at www.befriender­s.org.

 ??  ?? Oral Roberts forward Francis Lacis celebrates after the Golden Eagles’ upset of Florida on Sunday to reach the Sweet 16 of the NCAA tournament. Photograph: Trevor Brown Jr/NCAA Photos/Getty Images
Oral Roberts forward Francis Lacis celebrates after the Golden Eagles’ upset of Florida on Sunday to reach the Sweet 16 of the NCAA tournament. Photograph: Trevor Brown Jr/NCAA Photos/Getty Images

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