2000 ANNUAL REPORT ON ANTI-CATHOLICISM
March 1, 2001
The Catholic League’s 2000 Annual Report
on Anti-Catholicism is now available.
The annual report lists incidents of
anti-Catholicism that were brought to the league’s attention in
2000. Entries from the following areas are listed: activist
organizations; the arts; business and the workplace; education;
government; the media; miscellaneous. It includes a preface by
Catholic League president William Donohue and an executive summary
by Robert P. Lockwood, director of research. The volume reprints
a sample of offensive cartoons that appeared in 2000. Op-ed page
ads from the New York Times that the league published
during the year are also included.
Copies are now being sent to those on our
media list, bishops, congressmen and senators, educators, Catholic
colleges and universities, civil rights activists, major
supporters of the Catholic League, and many others. Copies are
available to the public for $10.
William Donohue released the following
statement on this subject today:
“The Catholic League’s 2000 Annual
Report on Anti-Catholicism provides all the evidence needed
to convince even the most skeptical person of the prevalence of
Catholic bashing in America today. In one volume, readers can
experience the depth and breath of this ancient form of
bigotry. It is my hope that they will compare the findings in
our work to the findings listed in similar documents prepared by
other civil rights organizations.
“Because the most virulent strains of
anti-Catholicism can be found in the quarters of the well
educated, it would be foolish to conclude that education is the
greatest antidote to bigotry. Indeed, if this were true, the
most educated people in Europe would not have given us the
Holocaust. This said, education is still a resource that can be
used—along with other means—to combat intolerance. This volume
can assist in that effort.”
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