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from http://www.jonahhouse.org

Yesterday was the last day for Stephen Kobasa teaching English in a
Catholic High School in Connecticut. What follows is Stephen's account of
what transpired. He is taking time to reflect on what has happened and
discern his own response.  After class today, he talked with a reporter
from the National Catholic Reporter and, it seems, will be speaking with
the press. Your support for Stephen at this time is important. If you feel
moved to write the people he includes at the bottom of his letter, please
do so.


Friends all...It is not always easy to predict the moment when conscience
will make its claims.The history below is drawn largely from a letter that
I sent to Bishop Lori of the Diocese of Bridgeport. That letter was never
answered.

My vocation as a Catholic high school teacher is now in its twenty-fifth
year. Since 1999, I have taught English literature at Kolbe Cathedral High
School in Bridgeport. Throughout that time, I have worked to take
seriously that universal affirmation of St. Paul in his letter to the
Galatians that "There is neither Jew nor Greek, there is neither slave nor
free person, there is not male and female; for you are all one in Christ
Jesus."

In a meeting with me on Friday, September 30th of this year, Dr. Margaret
Dames, Superintendent of School of the Diocese of Bridgeport, explicitly
stated that I would be dismissed from my employment as a teacher at Kolbe
Cathedral High School if I refused to permanently display the flag of the
United States of America in the class room to which I am assigned.
Delivered in the form of an ultimatum, the threat of this penalty is the
consequence of a policy which has no official documentation, and for which
I have been refused any explanation.

To concur in this policy would be to act against my conscience as a
believing Roman Catholic Christian.

My teaching can never take its legitimacy from any symbol except the Cross
of Christ. To elevate any national emblem to that level would be for me to
ignore the fundamental call of Jesus to compassion without boundaries.
Although I have explained to any who have asked concerning the absence of
the flag from my classroom, I have never demanded that any colleague or
student imitate the practice merely upon my example. Rather, I offer it up
as reflecting my own prayerful consideration of what my faith requires of
me. For me, an essential element of the mission of Catholic education is
to offer evidence of the practice of nonviolent peacemaking and principled
resistance to nationalism that have been nourished and expressed within
our  tradition.

It is impossible for me not to see an act of discrimination against my
long held religious beliefs in the invention and application of this
policy requiring the flag in my classroom. Its unique and arbitrary
standard, along with the extreme penalty attached to refusing it, creates
the unmistakable impression that national loyalty is being valued over
faithful obedience to the Gospel.

My attempt to pursue the grievance policy provided for by my teacher's
contract was abandoned after the teachers' association of the diocese
refused to support me, citing the primacy of "private property" in the
case.

This has never been simply a matter of free speech, but of fidelity to the
Gospel, an issue which all of the Church authorities involved have refused
to acknowledge. Neither have they expressed any regret for the anxiety
visited upon our family by their actions.

This morning, I removed the flag from my classroom  for one last time.
This afternoon, the principal asked me to return my key. Students and
colleagues embraced me throughout the hours between those two moments,
reminding me of why I came to teach in the first place, and of why I am
leaving now. It was my last lesson for them; my last lesson from them.

in peace,

Stephen

p.s. The addresses below are provided for your information:

The Most Reverend William E. Lori, S.T.D.
Bishop of the Diocese of Bridgeport
The Catholic Center
238 Jewett Avenue
Bridgeport, CT 06606
203-372-4301, Ext. 400

Margaret A. Dames, Ed.D.
Superintendent of Schools and Director of the Office for Education The
Catholic Center
238 Jewett Ave.
Bridgeport, CT 06606
203-372-4301, Ext. 380
Fax : 203-372-1961
Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Mrs. Jo-Anne Jakab, Principal
Kolbe Cathedral High School
33 Calhoun Place
Bridgeport, CT 06604
203-335-2554
Fax: 203-335-2556
Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

_____________________________

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