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A 16-year-old student at the Bergen Arts and Science Charter School, a public school in New Jersey, recently painted a mural on a pole in the cafeteria depicting support for the LGBTQ community via a rainbow heart and gender symbols that are interlocking in different ways.

As far as art goes, it was inclusive and welcoming. So of course the Catholic Church hates it. And because the school’s building is owned by the Catholic Church — it used to be a Catholic school itself — the Church believes it has the right to dictate what the school does inside its walls. In fact, they demanded that the school paint over the design… which it did.

The question now is whether the Church is within its rights to make such a request. The lease agreement certainly suggests as much.

A lease agreement for the school includes a stipulation about Catholic values. “Due to the Catholic nature of the Landlord, Tenant promises to conduct no affairs or establish any organizations that would be contrary to its Catholic moral values, ethics and faith,” the lease states.

[Holy Trinity Church Rev. Paul] Prevosto said that, per the lease, anything “that would be contrary to our Catholic sensitivity should not be displayed or seen.”

Even under Catholic rules, though, that request made no sense. While the Church opposes LGBTQ rights, they claim to love LGBTQ people, and this artwork was about love. It wasn’t offensive. It wasn’t graphic. What exactly did the Catholic Church have a problem with? We never find out. Also, by their logic, this school can’t teach comprehensive sex education because birth control of any kind runs contrary to Catholic beliefs. Is this a public school or a Catholic school by another name?

The student whose artwork was destroyed has the same questions:

(Keith Haring is a muralist from the 1980s whose work the student was imitating.)

Plenty of local civil rights groups have issued statements in defense of the mural and this weird-and-possibly-illegal relationship between the charter school and the Church.

It is offensive, unconscionable, and flatly unconstitutional for this church acting as a for-profit landlord to restrict a public school’s curriculum or censor student speech within those walls. This type of hate-fueled bigotry is precisely why New Jersey needs LGBTQ-inclusive curriculum to promote acceptance and understanding,” said Garden State Equality Executive Director Christian Fuscarino in a statement.

For its part, the Archdiocese of Newark says stories about this incident have been “grossly misrepresented,” but their own statement suggests the reporting is correct.

The Holy Trinity Church simply raised two concerns. First, that the school refrain from consistently painting on the building surfaces. Secondly, that the school remove some content in a new painting, which included some symbols of sexuality that were inappropriate for the building, as the building is utilized by parishioners of the Church, as well as the School.

If painting any mural was a problem, then they might have a point. But the instructions called for only certain symbols to be changed, meaning the problem is the Church’s bigotry. If this whole controversy teaches us anything, it’s that the Catholic Church is no place for LGBTQ people and anyone who cares for them. Kudos to the student for bringing that fact to public attention.

(via The New Civil Rights Movement)

Hemant Mehta is the founder of FriendlyAtheist.com, a YouTube creator, podcast co-host, and author of multiple books about atheism. He can be reached at @HemantMehta.

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