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University Administrator Declares Christmas 'Forbidden'
By Nathan Burchfiel
CNSNews.com Correspondent
December 16, 2005
(CNSNews.com) - An administrator at California State
University, Sacramento has banned decorations pertaining to Christmas
and the 4th of July, among other holidays, from her office because they
represent "religious discrimination" and "ethnic insensitivity."
"Time
has come to recognize that religious discrimination, as well as ethnic
insensitivity to certain holidays, is forbidden," Patricia Sonntag,
director of the Office of Services to Students with Disabilities,
stated in the directive she e-mailed to members of her staff on Dec. 9.
Cybercast News Service
obtained the directive from the non-profit Catholic League, which
"defends the right of Catholics ... to participate in American public
life without defamation or discrimination," according to its website.
The content of the e-mail was confirmed by the university.
The
memo specifically names Christmas, Thanksgiving, Halloween, Valentine's
Day, the 4th of July, St. Patrick's Day and Easter as the most
offensive holidays, but Sonntag adds that they are "off the top of the
list," implying that there may be others.
She wrote that the ban
was being implemented "in order to avoid offending someone else"
because Sacramento State is "a secular university and we are a public
service area that has a diverse employee and student populations [sic]
even in our private offices."
Sonntag noted that she is "the
worst offender and celebrant," and apologized "if this offends anyone,
but it is time to start the new year differently."
A Nov. 28
profile of Sonntag in the university's faculty and staff newsletter
stated that she and her office "Have been the cornerstone of equality
and progress here on campus."
But the university associate vice
president for public affairs, Frank Whitlatch, distanced the university
from Sonntag's policy, saying in a prepared statement that it "was
well-intentioned but strays from the established practice."
He
stated that the university "has no guidelines prohibiting holiday
decorations," aside from the responsibility of supervisors, "to ensure
that employees do not spend an unreasonable amount of work time
decorating."
Whitlatch echoed Sonntag's sentiments that
Sacramento State "is a public entity ... and employees do not endorse
specific religious beliefs while on the job."
Catholic League
president Bill Donohue called the policy a violation of free speech
rights. "It never occurs to these secular supremacists that it is their
aversion to anything religious - or patriotic - that accounts for their
desire to muzzle free speech."
A receptionist in Sonntag's office told Cybercast News Service
that Sonntage was on vacation. The office's assistant director, Teresa
Mendick, did not return calls requesting comment for this article.
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