Geller Report
 
 
California: Catholic school removes statues to avoid offending  Muslim 
students
 
By _Pamela Geller_ (https://pamelageller.com/author/admin/)  - on August 
28,  2017


 
“The students attending San Domenico come from a  variety of religious 
backgrounds besides Christianity: Judaism, Buddhism,  Hinduism and Islam.” If 
there are any Jews attending this school, you can be  sure that they didn’t 
complain about the statues. Buddhists and Hindus in the  U.S. have never 
complained about Christian symbols being displayed in Christian  institutions, 
either. There is only one group that this is all about, the  religion of the 
perpetually enraged and aggrieved. 
“San Anselmo’s San Domenico School creates stir by  removing Catholic 
statues,” by Richard Halstead, _Marin Independent  Journal_ 
(http://www.marinij.com/social-affairs/20170824/san-anselmos-san-domenico-school-creates-stir-by-
removing-catholic-statues) , August 24, 2017: 
Removal of a number of statues and other smaller  Catholic icons from the 
campus of San Domenico School in San Anselmo has  raised concerns among some 
parents. 
In an email to the school’s board of directors,  Dominican Sisters of San 
Rafael and the head of school, Shannon Fitzpatrick  objected to the removal 
of the statues and other steps the school has taken in  an effort to make the 
school more inclusive. 
“Articulating an inclusive foundation appears to  mean letting go of San 
Domenico’s 167-year tradition as a Dominican Catholic  school and being both 
afraid and ashamed to celebrate one’s heritage and  beliefs,” wrote 
Fitzpatrick, whose 8-year-old son attends the  school.
 

She added, “In our time here, the word ‘Catholic’  has been removed from 
the mission statement, sacraments were removed from the  curriculum, the 
lower school curriculum was changed to world religions, the  logo and colors 
were changed to be ‘less Catholic,’ and the uniform was  changed to be less 
Catholic.”
 

Responding to follow-up questions Monday,  Fitzpatrick wrote, “There are 
other families having the same concerns I do.  Many parents feel if the school 
is heading in a different direction then the  San Domenico community should 
have been notified before the signing of the  enrollment for the following 
year.”
 

Cheryl Newell, who had four children graduate from  San Domenico, said, “I 
am extremely disappointed in the school and the  direction they’ve been 
going. This isn’t a new thing that they’ve been  intentionally eroding their 
Catholic heritage. They’re trying to be something  for everyone and they’re 
making no one happy,”
 

Kim Pipki, whose daughter left San Domenico two  years ago after graduating 
from ninth grade, said some of the statues were  also important to families 
who aren’t Catholic. 
“The one main statue that has everyone fired up is  the baby Jesus and Mary 
one,” Pipki said. “It was at the center of the primary  school courtyard.”
 

Pipki said the school had a ceremony during which  children would place a 
crown on the statue of Mary.
 

“It was less about God and more about passing on  some traditions,” Pipki 
said. “People were shocked that the statues were  pitched in the basement.”
 

Amy Skewes-Cox, who heads San Domenico School’s  board of trustees, said 
the relocation and removal of some of the school’s 180  religious icons was “
completely in compliance” with San Domenico’s new  strategic plan, approved 
unanimously by the board of trustees and the  Dominican Sisters of San 
Rafael last year. She said at least 18 icons remain,  including a statue of St. 
Dominic at the center of the  campus.
 

She noted that it was unfortunate the removal of the  statues occurred at 
about the same time as the unrest in Charlottesville over  the removal of a 
statue of Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee, and that the issues  are “totally 
different” and have “absolutely no connection other than it is  change, and 
people have a hard time with change.”… 
One of the strategic plan’s stated goals is to  “strengthen San Domenico’s 
identity as an independent school” and clearly  articulate its “inclusive 
spiritual foundation.”
 

San Domenico was founded by the Dominican Sisters in  1850 as an 
independent, Catholic school — meaning that it is not owned or  operated by a 
parish 
or religious order. 
“San Domenico is both a Catholic school and an  independent school,” said 
Head of School Cecily Stock, “but what we were  finding after doing some 
research is that in the broader community we are  known as being a Catholic 
school and are not necessarily known as an  independent school. We want to make 
sure that prospective families are aware  that we are an independent school.
”
 

Of the 660 students who attend the K-12 school, 121  are boarding students 
and 98 of these are international students from British  Columbia, Beijing, 
Shanghai, Hong Kong, Mexico, Korea, Thailand and Vietnam.  The students 
attending San Domenico come from a variety of religious  backgrounds besides 
Christianity: Judaism, Buddhism, Hinduism and  Islam….

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