Education

January 12
Milford, NY
 – Americans United for Separation of Church and State filed a friend-of-the-court brief to the Supreme Court over the right of public schools to deny access to religious groups to hold religious education classes on school property after school. The court case, Good News Club v. Milford Central School, arose after the school system denied use of the school premises to the Good News Club for after-school activities that involve hymns and religious education. The school district permits groups such as the Boy Scouts, Girl Scouts and 4-H Club to meet. Milford’s building use policy, however, forbids religious activities and claimed that the purpose of the Good News Club was conversion of elementary school students. The Good News Club argued that it has a right to the same access as others and was teaching the same sort of moral lessons, but from a religious point of view.

January 27
Long Island, NY
 – A Catholic student appeared at a New York public high school to take her SAT exam. A member of her school’s Catholic League chapter, she was wearing a Catholic League T-shirt. The teacher monitoring the SAT exam told her to put her jacket back on to cover the T-shirt, saying the shirt was “racist” and “discriminated against other students.”

February
San Diego, CA
 – A play written by a student at San Diego State University was performed in bilingual performances in San Diego and Tijuana. The play depicted the devil trying to overtake the forces of good by posing as priests and nuns.

February
Bethlehem, PA
 – An art exhibit at Lehigh University from November 2000 through February 25, 2001 was called “Four Outside Artists: The End is a New Beginning.” The artists included Norbert Kox, the creator of the “To Hell and Back” display at the Neville Public Museum in Green Bay, WI. That exhibit featured the Virgin Mary as the “Great Harlot” and labeled Christ as the “Son of Perdition.” At the Lehigh exhibit, Cox displayed a monster in the image of the Statue of Liberty wearing four bras. Under each are scapulars of Jesus and Mary. On the torch is a rosary with a snake and the book in the hand has a cross with a pig on it.

February 11
College Park, MD
 – The University of Maryland’s Department of Theater staged Christopher Durang’s “Sister Mary Ignatius Explains It All For You” February 11-18. Representatives of many faiths have condemned the play for its vicious attacks on Catholic beliefs. The University Theatre brochure highlighted the anti-Catholic nature of the play: “In Sister Mary Ignatius, Durang shines a spotlight on the Catholic Church, revealing its blind faith teachings as an extremely dangerous influence on people’s lives.”

February 26
Orono, ME 
– According to a report in the National Catholic Register, a third-grader who wore a sweatshirt and a T-shirt with the name “Jesus Christ” was told to turn them inside out because they might disrupt the class. The principal argued that other students might find the sweatshirt to be profane.

March
Atlanta, GA
 – State Attorney General Thurbert E. Baker ruled that Georgia public schools can show “respect for their creator” and may display the U.S. national motto, “In God We Trust” on posters in school classrooms. Georgia law requires the State Board of Education to develop a “comprehensive character education program” in schools that includes, among 27 character traits, “respect for the creator.” He gave the opinion that “respect for the creator” does not endorse any particular theory of creation, nor does it “disparage those who do not hold a belief in creation.”
Kay Young of the ACLU of Georgia indicated the group would sue. Liberty wearing four bras. Under each are scapulars of Jesus and Mary. On the torch is a rosary with a snake and the book in the hand has a cross with a pig on it.

February 11
College Park, MD
 – The University of Maryland’s Department of Theater staged Christopher Durang’s “Sister Mary Ignatius Explains It All For You” February 11-18. Representatives of many faiths have condemned the play for its vicious attacks on Catholic beliefs. The University Theatre brochure highlighted the anti-Catholic nature of the play: “In Sister Mary Ignatius, Durang shines a spotlight on the Catholic Church, revealing its blind faith teachings as an extremely dangerous influence on people’s lives.”

February 26
Orono, ME
 – According to a report in the National Catholic Register, a third-grader who wore a sweatshirt and a T-shirt with the name “Jesus Christ” was told to turn them inside out because they might disrupt the class. The principal argued that other students might find the sweatshirt to be profane.

March
Atlanta, GA
 – State Attorney General Thurbert E. Baker ruled that Georgia public schools can show “respect for their creator” and may display the U.S. national motto, “In God We Trust” on posters in school classrooms. Georgia law requires the State Board of Education to develop a “comprehensive character education program” in schools that includes, among 27 character traits, “respect for the creator.” He gave the opinion that “respect for the creator” does not endorse any particular theory of creation, nor does it “disparage those who do not hold a belief in creation.”
Kay Young of the ACLU of Georgia indicated the group would sue.

March
Queens, NY
 – According to a report in The Tablet newspaper of the diocese of Brooklyn, NY, a public high school in Queens displayed anti-Catholic art in a student exhibition. The art allegedly depicts a white rendition of the Blessed Mother surrounded by angels with the word “Evil” written above it. Next to it is a rendition of a black woman with the word “Good” above it. The Tablet was denied permission from the Superintendent of the District to view and photograph the exhibit at the school.

March 20
Greenwich, CT
 – Greenwich High School, during “Diversity Week,” sponsored a talk by Garrett Stack, principal of Franklin School in Stratford, CT. Stack listed the Catholic Church and the Boy Scouts as “anti-gay” and attacked the Church’s teaching on homosexuality. A female student in attendance was so upset by the attack on the Church that she left the auditorium in tears.

March 28-31
Boca Raton, FL
 – “Corpus Christi,” the Terrence McNally play that depicts a Christ figure having sex with the Apostles, was performed at Florida Atlantic University. The Catholic League protested the state-sponsored event and the Commissioner of Education for the state of Florida issued a strong condemnation of the play.

April 18
Stamford, CT
 – At the University of Connecticut a one-woman play, “The Second Coming of Joan of Arc,” was presented by Carolyn Gage. In answer to the question, “Whose God is it anyway?” the playwright responds that the saint is “the cross-dressing butch with the smart mouth.”

April
Ft. Wayne, IN
 – The Terrence McNally play “Corpus Christi” in which Jesus has sex with the Apostles was scheduled to be performed in the summer at Indiana University-Purdue University (IPFW). Though students themselves raised money for the play voluntarily, six Indiana state senators questioned the use of state-funded university facilities for the production of an anti-Christian play. IPFW Chancellor Michael Wartell defended production of the play as an exercise in academic freedom. In a letter to Chancellor Wartell, Catholic League president William Donohue noted that IPFW in its mission statement pledges its commitment to tolerance and multiculturalism. Donohue proposed that Chancellor Wartell meet with the students involved in the play to explain “how hurtful this exercise in free expression is to Christians.”

September
Westchester County, NY
 – Three school districts in Westchester County published their yearly calendars in the local paper. The Bronxville calendar omitted mention of all religious holidays during the school year. The Eastchester calendar listed Rosh Hashanah (twice), Yom Kippur, Passover and Easter but Christmas was omitted. The Tuckahoe calendar listed Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur but omitted both Christmas and Easter. Tuckahoe Union Free School District Superintendent Michael Yarzula, in a response to a letter from the Catholic League asking about the omitted dates, was “extremely angry” about being questioned on the topic. He did say however, it was an oversight and the calendar would be revisited with an eye toward restoring the Christian holidays.

October
Columbia, SC
 – The University of South Carolina student newspaper, The Gamecock, included a story about an off-campus event held in Columbia called “The Fetish Ball.” The story described in detail the sexual performances by the participants including those dressed as Catholic schoolgirls, nuns and priests. In reporting the general motivation of the event’s organizers, the reporter wrote, “The performance was directed against conservatism and intolerance, represented by stereotypes of the Catholic Church.”
The story was placed on the front page of “The Mix” section with more column space than the preview of the upcoming USC football game. Accompanying the story were graphic pictures of the event.

October 20
Beaufort, SC
 – A haunted house sponsored by the University of South Carolina Beaufort and the Rape Crisis Center of the Lowcountry featured a priest and a nun as the frightening characters. Two University of South Carolina students portrayed an “evil Father Kelley” and a “twisted Sister Mary Moore.” The South Carolina Student Government Association later apologized for the portrayal.

November 7
New Orleans, LA
 – The student newspaper at Tulane University, the Tulane Hullabaloo, featured an article—complete with pictures of sexual positions and the top places to have sex on campus. One of the demonstrations of a sexual position was called the “double ‘O'” and showed two students imitating a sexual act on the letters that spell out Loyola University, a nearby Catholic institution.

November 28
Sharon, MA
 – Sharon High School held a Halloween party at which two male students came dressed as pregnant nuns and another as the priest impregnator. They were awarded first prize by a faculty panel; the offending students received the most comical costume award. School officials at the predominately Jewish school later admitted the costumes and the prize were inappropriate. Amazingly, they said they were particularly diligent in making sure no one came dressed in a costume that could be construed as offensive to Muslims. School officials said such an incident would never happen again and invited the Anti-Defamation League to come to the school and provide sensitivity training and to discuss the Holocaust. The Catholic League was not invited.
No disciplinary action was taken against either the students or teachers involved in the incident. This despite the fact Section 26.07, part 2, of the Massachusetts Department of Education regulations says “harassment or discrimination” based on religion must be prevented and that “all public schools shall respond promptly to such discrimination or harassment when they have knowledge of its occurrence.”
We sent the school 250 copies of last year’s annual report so that the students could learn more about anti-Catholicism.

November 30
Naples, FL
 – Naples High School performed the play “Do Black Patent Leather Shoes Really Reflect Up?” The play is widely known as being filled with derogatory stereotypes and trivializations of Catholic sacraments. The school had no plans to put on other plays that similarly depicted other faiths.

December
Frederick County, MD
 – An administrator in the Frederick County school system told employees they were prohibited from handing out Christmas cards in the schools because cards with a Christian message “may not be a legally protected right on a public school campus.”

December
Rochester, MN
 – Two 13-year-old middle school students were disciplined following a holiday skit. Their offense was wearing red and green scarves and ending the skit by saying, “We hope you all have a merry Christmas.”

December
Plymouth, MA
 – Two ninth-graders in the public school system were told they were not allowed to make Christmas cards if the cards said, “Merry Christmas” or if they depicted a nativity scene.

December
Plymouth, IL
 – A second-grade teacher was warned by the principal not to read a book about Christmas to her students. The book was available in the school library.

December
Silverton, OR
 – The Silverton superintendent of schools issued rules that said students had to remove all “religious” holiday decorations from their lockers. Secular decorations were allowed to stay.

December
Covington, GA
 – Following a threat of legal action from the American Civil Liberties Union, the Covington County school board deleted the word “Christmas” from its school calendar.

December
Sable Point, FL
 – A public elementary school principal threatened to fire a teacher for wearing a pin that had the inscription, “Jesus is the Reason for the Season.”

December
Oyster Bay, NY
 – A holiday concert at an elementary school featured students performing a number of songs. They were allowed to sing Jewish religious songs but not Christian songs. When a parent complained about the inequity, he was told the Jewish songs were balanced with songs about Christmas trees and Santa Claus.

December
Peoria, IL
 – Controversy erupted at Bradley University when a Christmas tree was put up in the student center. A Jewish student complained, leading to a number of letters to the student newspaper. Student Center director Pegi Meyer said this is the first complaint about the tree which had been put up there since the 1950s. There were neither nativity scenes nor crosses. The complaining student, Jackie Farber, said, “A Christmas tree … is put up for the Christmas season, and Christmas is a holiday that celebrates the birth of Jesus Christ. There are people in this country, and on this campus, who disagree with that.”

December
Cambridge, MA
 – Menorahs were placed in student housing units at Harvard University without a word of protest. But there were no nativity scenes. Indeed, the display of Christmas trees became a contentious issue on campus. Some Jewish students complained that the Christmas tree was divisive. One compared it to “a Trojan horse,” saying it opened the door to placing other offensive symbols on campus. He specifically mentioned the swastika.

December
Lebanon, PA
 – Rabbi Louis Zivic of Beth Israel Synagogue complained that the Holiday Concert at Cedar Crest High School was too Christian in emphasis. As a result, school officials decided to no longer ask visitors to stand while the chorus sings the “Hallelujah Chorus” from Handel’s “Messiah.” An official from the local chapter of the ADL, Gerrie Greene, agreed saying that it appears previous holiday concerts were “pervasively religious.” Greene noted that the concert “was almost entirely Christmas carols, most of which were sacred in nature.”

December 12
Cedar Falls, IA
 – The University of Northern Iowa hosted the Terrence McNally play, “Corpus Christi.” The play depicts a Christ figure having sex with the 12 apostles. The script is also replete with sexual and scatological comments, as well as behavior that is offensive. At one point in the play, the Christ figure proclaims to all the apostles that they are divine and then exclaims, “F— your mother, F— your father, F— God.” The character Philip turns to the Christ-figure and asks him to perform fellatio.




Government

January 24
Newburyport, MA
 – Newburyport Mayor Lisa Mead ordered that two bricks in a park walkway be removed. People were able to “buy” the bricks and inscribe them with a personal message as a fundraiser for a park . Of the 200 bricks purchased, the two were ordered removed after the mayor received complaints from certain offended residents. One brick read “Jesus Loves You” and the other read “For All the Unborn Children.” The mayor explained the display of the two bricks on town property violated federal law requiring separation of church and state. The brick purchasers sued to put the bricks back in the walkway.

January 29
Albany, NY
 – The New York State Assembly passed a bill that would require all employers to provide contraceptive insurance coverage for its employees. The Assembly explicitly rejected a religious conscience exemption clause which had been acceptable in the New York State Senate. The bill as passed by the Assembly would force Catholic organizations to provide such contraceptive coverage. Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver said that a conscience clause would be “taking religious freedom a little too far.”

March
Albany, NY
 – Edward Cardinal Egan of New York visited Albany to lobby against the bill for contraceptive insurance coverage that rejected a religious conscience exemption. Without such an exemption, the bill would force religious organizations to relinquish their doctrinal prerogatives and institutional autonomy. Certain clergy from other religious groups, however, spoke out against an exemption saying that it is “a matter of justice for women” that the clause be stricken. These clergy represented the United Church of Christ, Lutheran, Methodist, Presbyterian and Reform Jewish communities.

March 16
Washington, DC
 – President George W. Bush held a St. Patrick’s Day reception for Irish-American leaders and invited representatives from various parties in Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland. Among those invited who attended was Ian Paisley, the Northern Ireland minister known mostly for his hatred of the Catholic Church. Paisley has called the Church the “mother of Harlots” and referred to the pope as the anti-Christ and the “great fornicator.” The Catholic League protested the invitation to Paisley for an event that celebrates a Catholic saint.

March 21
Tallahassee, FL
 – A bill that unanimously passed the Florida Senate Banking and Insurance Committee would force insurance companies to cover the cost of contraceptives. Florida insurance companies and employers who do not comply with the ruling will be subject to significant liability. The Florida Catholic Conference opposed the bill because it did not provide an exemption or conscience clause for those organizations that are opposed to birth control on religious grounds.

April
Rockland County, NY
 – Clients of the Blaisdell Alcoholic Treatment Unit at Rockland Psychiatric Center were denied the right to go to Mass, according to sources at the center. Protestant services were regularly held. Officials at the New York State Office of Alcoholism and Substance Abuse Services said there was a staffing and facilities problem that led to the Catholic clients not being given the chance to attend Mass.

April 11
New York, NY
 – In a letter to supporters, New York State Senator Eric T. Schneiderman linked Father Frank Pavone, national director of Priests for Life, with those involved with criminal attacks on abortionists. Schneiderman called for a demonstration on April 25th outside the National Right to Life dinner at a New York hotel where Father Pavone was honored. In his letter he linked Father Pavone with a radical anti-abortion group, the Nuremberg Files, and said that Father Pavone “openly advocates criminal activity to harass abortion providers” without offering any evidence.

May
Howard County, MD
 – Mary Simmons of Howard County wanted to home school her children. The program she chose—a nationally respected Catholic curriculum—was not on the state of Maryland’s approved list of home school programs. When Ms. Simmons and her husband refused to submit the program for approval (the alternative to choosing a program from the approved list), the state filed 72 counts of criminal truancy against her.

May
Rockland County, NY
 – New York State officials, having corrected the problem of not offering clients at the Blaisdell Alcoholic Treatment Unit at Rockland Psychiatric Center a chance to attend Mass, were now denying them the right to go to Confession according to sources at the center. Officials later said they would make the necessary arrangements for the Sacrament of Reconciliation.

July 4
Sacramento, CA
 – A California state appeals court upheld a law that requires a Catholic charity to include contraception in an employee health plan covering prescription drugs. Catholic Charities of Sacramento filed a lawsuit saying the law should be set aside because it violates the group’s religious freedom. James F. Sweeney, the attorney for Catholic Charities, said the Roman Catholic Church was targeted. “People of faith should be deeply disturbed,” he said.

July 14
New York, NY & Washington, DC
 – A group of pro-abortion feminists, led by Frances Kissling of Catholics for a Free Choice and Eleanor Smeal of the Feminist Majority, held a rally at the Vatican mission in New York and the Vatican embassy in Washington, DC. The demonstrators claimed they were protesting what they said was the Vatican’s lack of accountability in addressing the alleged issue of sexual abuse of nuns by priests. The protest leaders have a long history of animosity toward the Church. Kissling is on record saying it was her lifelong goal to “overthrow” the Catholic Church. Smeal is on record tying the Catholic bishops to the Ku Klux Klan as part of a “reactionary coalition.”

July 17
Trenton, NJ
 – New Jersey U.S. Representative Rush Holt was quoted in the Trentonian newspaper discussing the national debate on federal funding of embryonic stem cell research. Holt, who supports the funding, said, “I bet there isn’t a bishop in the United States that wouldn’t take advantage of it….And most people here in central New Jersey would think it’s the ethical thing to do, to do this research.”
After a complaint lodged by the Catholic League, Holt wrote a letter of apology to league president William Donohue saying he knew he chose his words poorly and regretted any offense anyone took at the remarks.

July 27
New York, NY
 – FCYU, a publication of the New York City Youth Commission, ran an article by Princess Carr that railed against the Catholic Church’s teaching on contraception. A cartoon accompanying the article was a caricature with three nuns in the pose of the stereotypical “hear no evil, speak no evil, see no evil.” The Youth Commission is funded by taxpayers.

July 31
Washington, DC
 – During the debate over competing bills on human cloning, U.S. Rep. Jim McDermott (D-WA) made several statements from the House floor about Catholicism. McDermott likened the current debate on cloning to an ancient story about the pope and the Spanish king. He began his remarks with the following tale: “We are like the 16th century Spanish king who went to the Pope and asked him if it was all right for human beings to drink coffee. And so the Spanish king went to the Pope and said, ‘Pope, is it all right?'” Then, in an obvious reference to Pope John Paul II’s recent denunciation of embryonic stem cell research, McDermott commented, “Well, we had that just the other day, and the Pope said, this is not right.” McDermott then brought up Galileo and pointedly said of his colleagues that “here we are making a decision like we were the house of cardinals on a religious issue….”
In a subsequent radio interview, McDermott stuck to his position, refused to offer the apology the Catholic League had sought and asserted that the Church often “goes up against science.”

August 21
New York, NY 
– The New York City Council held a public hearing on a bill affecting the rights of abortion protestors. Bill 645-A would establish a 10-foot buffer zone around anyone within 50 feet of a “reproductive health care facility.” The bill would make it illegal for any abortion opponent to offer education, services or counseling, or even hold signs saying “Choose Life” within the 10-foot zone. The Catholic League testified in opposition to the bill because it would have a disparate impact on the religious liberty rights of Catholics.

August 22
Raleigh, NC 
– A North Carolina state legislator caused a controversy when he forwarded an e-mail to his fellow lawmakers. State Representative Don Davis (R) passed on the e-mail that said white men and Christianity made America great and that Catholicism enslaved Europe. The passage on Catholicism also said Catholicism perverted the Bible. Davis first defended forwarding the e-mail saying, “I think there is a lot of truth in that.” He later apologized.

August 29
Wales, WI
 – The Kettle Moraine School Board, which previously barred a second grader from handing out religious-themed holiday cards, apologized to the girl and her family while enacting new guidelines for such material. The girl was originally ordered to stop handing out Christian Valentine’s Day and Halloween cards. Her family sued. The board subsequently issued guidelines saying hand-out material could not be “defamatory or contrary to the mission of the school.”

October
Albany, NY
 – Over the past few years, the Catholic League has received many complaints from New Yorkers regarding a video that all prospective jurors have to watch. The video contains a reenactment of a medieval “trial by ordeal” that reflects very badly on Catholicism.
Catholic League president William Donohue wrote a letter of complaint to Judge Judith Kaye, chief judge of the New York State Court of Appeals. He questioned the propriety of showing a video that is biased against the Church in a forum that is supposed to prepare jurors to be objective in their judgments. Judge Kaye agreed. The scene in question has been removed from the video.

October
Sacramento, CA
 – Catholic Charities of Sacramento appealed a lower state court ruling that said it must adhere to a state law requiring all California employers with prescription coverage to include Food and Drug Administration-approved contraceptives in their insurance policies. Catholic Charities considered it an infringement on its religious liberty rights guaranteed in both the California and U.S. Constitutions. The American Civil Liberties Union filed a friend-of-the-court brief against Catholic Charities, claiming, “religious rights do not trump employees’ health [and therefore] neither free exercise or establishment clause principles support Catholic Charities’ non-compliance with California’s important health policy.”

November
Chicago, IL
 – James Oberweis, a Republican candidate for a United States Senate seat from Illinois, made media appearances to launch his candidacy. On two occasions—once on a popular local radio show and another in a local newspaper article—Oberweis explained his position on abortion: “I think that right now we’re getting a very, very strong symbol in the Taliban of what can happen if we try to impose our religious beliefs on others.”
The Catholic League pointed out that Oberweis was comparing any lawmaker who voted pro-life to terrorists. At first, Oberweis admitted that his comparison was “probably not the best analogy,” but that he has no intention of apologizing for his remarks. After the Catholic League threatened to take out advertisements highlighting his remarks, Oberweis called the Catholic League to apologize and pledged never to use the analogy again.

November 5
Lincoln, NE
 – The Nebraska Unicameral Legislature was debating cutbacks in scholarship programs when State Senator Ernie Chambers launched into an attack on the Catholic Church. Chambers’ complaint was aimed at the “Catholic hierarchy.” He accused four fellow lawmakers of an “unholy alliance” with the Church to protect the scholarship program. He said the Catholic Church was a “political entity” that was guilty of such past “crimes” as allowing segregated schools and the persecution of Galileo. Among his other comments in the debate: “You all know that the Catholic hierarchy and church walk through here like a monster in seven league boots, tromping on the senators, intimidating the senators, calling them to task, letting them know that their soul may be at stake if they don’t do exactly what they’re told to do, exactly as they’re told to do it.” Chambers also charged that “were it not for the Catholic muscle on this floor and in committee, which is exercised for the church rather than the state, a lot of things would not even come before us and they certainly would not receive the votes they get. I can tell how Catholics are going to vote on issues, and I’ve done it with lobbyists before.”
The Catholic League called on the legislature to censure Chambers.

November 14
King County, WA
 – County executive Ron Sims issued a memo mandating that King County employees use “religion-neutral” language when referring to the holidays. He said it was okay to say “Happy Holidays” and “Holiday Greetings.” But all references to Christmas were regarded as taboo. Sims explained, “we at King County want to ensure that any upcoming holiday celebration at the workplace is held in a respectful, inclusive, and sensitive manner that does not favor one religion over the other.” (His emphasis.) He went on to say, “Particularly in public areas, this means that any holiday recognition or celebration should be religion-neutral.”
Because of media pressure by the Catholic League, Sims was soon forced to reverse himself.

November 19
Westchester, NY
 – Lakeland school district superintendent Barnett Sturm wrote a “Community View” piece for the Journal News newspaper opposing school vouchers. Among his arguments were: “We frequently become isolated by communities [and] by churches….There are even gated communities and religions that teach intolerance….We allow for a diversity of thought. We do not fail a student because he or she holds a particular belief system. In private and parochial schools, we find students are taught that practicing the wrong religion prevents some children from going to heaven….We will find reinforcing of values from foreign lands, rather than an education for American citizenry.”

November 28
Phoenix, AZ
 – The Arizona attorney general’s office issued a memo to its employees about what was and what was not permissible as far as holiday decorations were concerned. Gale Garriott, chief counsel of the Agency Counsel Division, banned any items “that have a religious significance attached to them.” He specifically listed Santa Claus as an example. When workers complained, he issued another memo that left in place all the banned items save that he excised the words “religious significance.” In the general work area, “Unacceptable decorations would include nativity scenes, crosses, Stars of David, Christmas trees, Santa Clauses, Santa Claus-related items, and other similar items that may be offensive to some of our employees or the public.”
Arizona Governor Jane Hull called Catholic League president William Donohue on December 18 thanking him for notifying her of the ban on Santa Claus in public areas of the attorney general’s office. But Attorney General Janet Napolitano justified the ban by saying that her office constitutes a “people’s lobby” that does not allow displays that might offend those of various “faiths and cultures.”

November 28
New York, NY
 – Chad Vignola, general counsel to New York City Schools Chancellor Harold Levy, released a memo to all superintendents and principals declaring all secular holiday symbols to be permissible in the schools. Vignola listed as examples of secular symbols “Christmas trees, Menorahs, and the Star and Crescent.” When the Catholic League pointed out to the chancellor that the memo contradicted rulings by the U.S. Supreme Court, Levy maintained “The Supreme Court has previously refused to permit erection of a nativity scene on public property.” The Catholic League put the chancellor on notice that it would pursue a lawsuit in the coming year.

November 30
New York, NY
 – Dr. Fran Levy, principal of PS 22 (The Thomas Jefferson Magnet School of Humanities in Flushing), issued a memo inviting teachers to bring to school religious symbols that represent the Muslim, Kwanzaa and Jewish religions. (Kwanzaa, however, is not a religion.) No mention of Christianity was made. A day earlier, Dr. Levy ordered a three-foot Christmas tree taken down because it was larger than a cut-out display of a menorah and the crescent and star.

December
Madison, WI
 – The administration of Wisconsin Governor Scott McCallum insisted on calling the traditional Christmas tree at the state capitol the “Holiday Tree” so as not to offend those who don’t celebrate Christmas.

December
Portland, ME
 – The Portland Housing Authority clarified its policy on decorations for religious celebrations by saying, “There shall be no angels, crosses, Stars of David [or] any other icons of religion displayed on the walls, ceilings, floors, doors, etc. of any place within our buildings EXCEPT inside your own individual apartment. Inside your door is OK. The outside of your door that is exposed to the common hallway is not. . . . If an angel . . . were displayed in the community room, it could offend someone who might believe, for instance, that angels are symbols of evil.”

December
Ramsey County, MN
 – County Manager Paul Kirkwold banned the traditional display of red poinsettias in the county’s St. Paul courthouse because a few citizens had complained in previous years that the red-leafed plant had a religious connotation. St. Paul Mayor Norm Coleman (who happens to be Jewish) condemned the ban and asked that poinsettias once again brighten the courthouse interior. An agreement was reached: two-dozen holiday plants were ordered, but only on the condition that they were white.

December
Kensington, MD
 – The town of Kensington officially banned Santa Claus at its annual Christmas tree lighting ceremony. The ban was instituted after two residents complained at a town meeting that Santa made them feel uncomfortable. When the day came for the actual lighting ceremony, dozens of people dressed as Santa showed up, leading some residents to complain the multiple Santas traumatized their children.

December
Northdale, FL 
– Government officials banned icicle lights that some residents wanted put up on public property as part of the Christmas season.

December
Vincennes, IN
 – Public housing officials banned all religious symbols from its complexes.

December 6
Geneva, NY
 – A monument honoring the heroes of September 11 was given to the American Legion in the neighboring town of Canandaigua. It was originally donated to the town of Geneva but not accepted. Part of the monument depicted the silhouette of a girl kneeling in Christian prayer. Some noted that it may have been unconstitutional for the city to erect it on public property.

December 10
West Palm Beach, FL
 – Following complaints from the Jewish War Veterans, menorahs that had been removed from the Veterans Affairs Medical Center were restored. Some of those who objected insisted that the menorahs be away from the Christmas tree. No nativity scene was placed anywhere in the medical center.




Media

Movies | Music | Newspapers | Periodicals | Radio |Television | Internet


MOVIES

February 9
The movie “Saving Silverman” opened nationally. The movie included a character who “is training to be a nun.” The would-be nun is “subjected to all manner of sexual embarrassment and displayed in various stages of PG-13 acceptable undress.” Vulgar nun jokes were included. The New York Post reviewer blasted the movie for being “misogynous and homophobic,” but did not mention the Catholic bashing.

March 15
Santa Barbara, CA – In a piece on Variety’s website, the movie “Amy’s Orgasm” was introduced. The movie won the Audience Award at a Santa Barbara preview. In the movie, Amy, who is Jewish, goes to a Catholic priest for confession. According to the review, “she finds a sympathetic priest, who is conflicted himself.” The confession scenes occur throughout the movie, where “Amy” spills out “her innermost fantasies and thoughts.”

May
The movie “The Body” is about the supposed finding of the bones of Jesus. As the Los Angeles Times commented, the film “makes an array of Catholics, Jews and Arabs look bad.”

May
The movie “A Question of Faith,” that the Chicago Sun-Times called “a pointless debacle,” is about a monk who engages in sex with a vision of the Archangel Gabriel, and then becomes a pregnant woman.

May
The movie “One Night at McCool’s” features a fidgeting, drooling, sexually repressed priest who loves to hear graphic sexual conversations. In one scene, the wafers are thrown out of a ciborium and the priest pours whiskey into it to take a drink. Jonathan Foreman of the New York Post, commenting on the priest character, saw it as “yet another cheap Hollywood jibe at the expense of the Catholic Church.”

June 1
The BBC-produced movie “A Love Divided” opened in a limited number of theaters. It is based on an allegedly true story about a Protestant woman, married to a Catholic, who brings her children up Protestant in Ireland in the 1950s after pledging to bring them up Catholic. As the story goes, when a local priest objects, the woman flees to Northern Ireland. Irish bishops then join a boycott of all Protestant goods and services and a national uproar follows.
Our objection was to the one-sided negative portrait of Catholicism; it feeds an anti-Catholic stereotyp. Stephen Whitney of the Newark Star-Ledger said, “It rather strenuously portrays the Catholic Church and the Republic of Ireland as a haven for bigots and bullies.”

July 3
New York, NY
 – A film called “Mr. Christie” was featured at the Pioneer Theatre in the East Village. The plot involves a homosexual man visited by Jesus. There are various scenes involving the gay man, his boyfriend and Jesus, including a scene where the Jesus figure surprises the gay man in a bathtub and changes the water into wine.

September 21
The movie “Liam” opened in select theaters. It is the story of a Depression-era Liverpool family seen through the eyes of a seven-year-old boy. Several Catholic elements were negatively portrayed. For example, there was the dreary tale of Liam’s experience preparing for First Communion. The way the school was portrayed is also noteworthy. Liam learns just how filthy children’s souls are. He learns this from his teachers, as well as from the parish priest. The priest, a quintessential bully, bombards the kids with horrific sermons on Hell, effectively bestowing them with fear and guilt.
“Liam” was written by Jimmy McGovern; the distributor was Lions Gate; and the producer was the BBC. McGovern previously wrote the anti-Catholic movie, “Priest”; Lions Gate previously released the anti-Catholic film, “Dogma”; and the BBC has produced more anti-Catholic flicks than any other company (it was also responsible for “Priest”).

September 25
“Megiddo: The Omega Code 2” opened after a two-week delay due to the terrorist attack of September 11. The plot is about Armageddon with events based on the Book of Revelations. Brought to the brink of destruction by a dictator who fights a worldwide coalition led by the U.S., the film is set in New York City and ends with a man being buried alive under rubble and debris. The film suggests that the antichrist and his priest companion are Catholic. A black mass is performed, a priest asks the antichrist to save him, etc. Los Angeles Times movie critic Kevin Thomas observed “much of the film is set outside Rome, with familiar shots of the Eternal City…it’s especially puzzling that not a word is heard from the Pope.” The movie portrays a human-like Satan taking over the world.
The movie is the work of Trinity Broadcasting Network’s Matt Crouch (Trinity is owned by Paul and Jan Crouch, Matt’s parents). Paul and Jan host the flagship show, “Praise the Lord,” and reach a wide audience of mostly Protestant viewers. They are evangelicals.

October
The John Travolta movie, “Domestic Disturbance,” contained a violent scene in a prostitute’s room that showed a large crucifix on the wall and a statue of Our Blessed Mother. The imagery added nothing to the scene or the storyline and was completely gratuitous.


MUSIC

April
The rock group the Go-Go’s announced they would release a new CD titled, “God Bless the Go-Go’s.” A website on the group is replete with Catholic imagery. All five women are dressed as the Virgin Mary on the home page. On another page, the same picture identifies each as “Purity,” “Honesty,” “Mercy,” “Chastity” and “Modesty.” A section entitled “Confessional” shows a priest with green hair and an earring, with the Go-Go’s logo on his priestly garb. Visitors are advised to “type in your confession…” and clicking “Bless me father” triggers a penance. There is also a cynically worded rendition of the Hail Mary.


NEWSPAPERS

January 19
Buffalo, NY
 – The “Earth’s Final Warning” advertisement from the Sweetwater Seventh Day Adventists appeared in the Buffalo News. When contacted by the Catholic League, the Buffalo News pledged not to run the advertisement again.

January 21
St. Paul, MN
 – The St. Paul Pioneer Press in its “Bulletin Board” section ran a story about a non-Catholic attending Easter Mass. The reporter wrote that the priest celebrating the Mass had a thick accent and that when “he got to the Communion part of the Mass, it came to me. He sounded just like Dracula: ‘eeeat of my flessshh, dreenk of my blaaad.'”

January 21
Cleveland, OH
 – In a story titled “A Gay in a Manger,” the Cleveland Scene reported on the cancellation of Terrence McNally’s “Corpus Christi” by a local theater. The play depicts a character representing Christ having sex with the Apostles. Cartoon artwork accompanying the story in the Cleveland Scene depicts an eye-shadowed Jesus with nipple rings.

January 24
Baltimore, MD
 – The City Paper ran a cartoon titled “Blowing One’s Cool in the Clutch.” The cartoon, by Tim Kreider, depicted the Crucifixion with Jesus yelling obscenities at the crowd.

February
Phoenix, AZ
 – The Arizona Republic—as well as the Paterson (NJ) Herald News and several other newspapers—ran an anti-voucher editorial cartoon by Steve Benson called “Repaying the Religious Right.” The cartoon featured a decrepit nun of “Our Sisters of Perpetual Pandering” in a Catholic school with a posted 10 Commandments reading, “I. Ignore the Constitution, then repeat nine times.”

February
Appleton, WI
 – The Fox Cities Life, a local community newspaper, carried a paid ad for “Gospel Light Ministries.” The ad was an anti-Catholic tract claiming that Catholics were not Christians as they “unknowingly practice a system that rejects Christ’s solution” in favor of traditions.

February 4
Canton, OH
 – The Repository of Canton, Ohio carried a column by Rick Senften about a Boston child whose parents removed her from the Church because she was allergic to the glutin inside the host. Senften wrote that Jesus did not specify wheat at the Last Supper and that if “bread and wine had not been available, a Pop Tart and a Coke would have sufficed for the Transubstantiation.” Senften went on to attack the Church’s teaching on the ordination of women. He wrote that the Church was now “essentially” saying that “You can’t be Catholic because you’re handicapped.”

February 22
Fort Wayne, IN
 – Stating that Christopher Durang’s “Sister Mary Ignatius Explains It All For You” stars “an irrepressible nun,” Fort Wayne Journal Gazette reporter Steve Penhollow wrote on an upcoming local production of the viciously anti-Catholic play at the First Presbyterian Theater. He described Sister Mary Ignatius as “an elderly nun” who is “enslaved to church doctrine.” First Presbyterian Theater Executive Director Thom Hofrichter defended the play, which ran at the theater through March 4. He stated that calling the play “anti-Catholic is a very limited view.”

March
San Antonio, TX 
– Columnist Melissa Fletche-Stoeltjo in the San Antonio Express-Newscompared Christians in general, and the Catholic Church in particular, to the intolerant Taliban who blew-up statues of Buddha in Afghanistan.

March 7
St. Petersburg, FL
 – Columnist Bill Maxwell of the St. Petersburg Times condemned Edward Cardinal Egan of New York for taking exception to Renee Cox’s photograph, “Yo Mama’s Last Supper” on display at the Brooklyn Museum of Art. Maxwell stated that the cardinal has “no ethical authority” to judge the artist and raised the issue of clerical child abuse. Maxwell had a follow-up column calling Cardinal Egan a hypocrite after a clergy abuse lawsuit was settled by all parties out of court in the Diocese of Bridgeport, CT which Cardinal Egan headed before his New York appointment. The abuse took place before Cardinal Egan was assigned to Bridgeport.

March 16
St. Petersburg, FL
 – The “Earth’s Final Warning” advertisement from the Eternal Gospel Church appeared in the March 16 edition of the St. Petersburg Times. The advertising director responded that the Catholic League’s complaint “would be a factor in our consideration if this advertisement were submitted again for publication.”

March 16
Grants Pass, OR
 – The Daily Courier newspaper ran the notoriously anti-Catholic “Earth’s Final Warning” advertisement from the Eternal Gospel Church.

March 30
Fort Lauderdale, FL
 – In an article in the Fort Lauderdale Sun-Sentinel, it was claimed that when the play “Corpus Christi” opened in New York, the Catholic League “threatened violence.” A retraction to the false charge appeared in the April 3 edition.

April 12
New York, NY
 – The New York Times ran a photo of Peter Vallone, Speaker of the City Council of New York, with the caption stating that “Council Speaker Peter F. Vallone goes to Mass every day, but he’s not so charitable to his political opponents these days.” After complaints, Times staffers were warned to be more sensitive to Catholics.

April 17
New York, NY
 – In a piece that appeared in the Village Voice, Tristan Taormino, a lesbian ex-Catholic, described how she discovered a store that sells sex toys made in the design of religious figures. She described a best-selling item called “Jackhammer Jesus,” displaying Jesus on the cross sitting atop a silicone-based penis.

April 17
New York, NY 
– The New York Daily News published a photo of a Holy Week procession in Spain. The caption explained that in the 15th century, penitents wore hoods to protect their identities. The photo, however, showed the penitents wearing white hoods with cone heads that Americans could easily mistake for hooded Klansmen.

April 17
Los Angeles, CA
 – A photo of a man dressed as a Catholic bishop appeared in the Los Angeles Times with the caption stating that “Archbishop Edmund Gilbert could face death by hanging.” The story noted that a “prominent churchmen stands accused of murdering a 15-year-old schoolgirl.” It was not until six paragraphs into the story that it is noted that the accused “archbishop” is a Baptist.

April 20
Worcester, MA
 – Jim Dempsey in the Telegram & Gazette wrote a column in which he described what it would be like if priests were holding a national convention in Worcester. Dempsey wrote that the priests would be going to bars and engage in all kinds of mayhem. When they leave, “we’ll have the problem of swaggering, cigarette-puffing altar boys to deal with.” The next day, editor Harry Whitin apologized for the column as “mean-spirited, anti-Catholic and crude.” Dempsey resigned his position as a columnist to take on a position as a reporter.

April 23
Northern New Jersey
 – On Easter Sunday, Suburban Trends ran a front-page picture of a local homeowner’s display of the Last Supper which substituted pink plastic flamingos for the Apostles.

April 26
New Jersey
 – Leader weekly newspapers published in New Jersey ran an editorial on the “poor taste” of an “infamous salute” used in Catholic churches. Parishioners at a Mass at St. Mary’s in Rutherford were seen raising their right arms in a way that the newspaper compared to the Nazi salute. In a follow-up editorial the papers did not apologize, commenting instead that if “a non-Catholic popped into Mass during the blessing, he or she would likely be confused or offended.” To which the Catholic League replied, “had you not been so ignorant of Roman Catholicism you would never have been offended in the first place.”

May 1
Winston-Salem, NC 
– The Winston-Salem Journal ran the Eternal Gospel Church’s advertisement, “Earth’s Final Warning.” The ad, among other things, depicts the Catholic Church as the “Whore of Babylon” and talks of a plan between the United States government and the pope to achievement world domination.

May 2
Fort Wayne, IN
 – In an editorial in defense of the decision of Indiana University-Purdue University Fort Wayne (IPFW) to host the play “Corpus Christi,” the newspaper cited academic freedom and artistic expression. In reviewing recent editorials, however, theJournal Gazette had taken to task sports teams that maintain Indian nicknames. Moreover, in an editorial in response to a “B.C.” cartoon that offended Jewish groups, the newspaper promised that it would never publish such offensive material again. The paper wrote that “anti-Semitic—or racist or anti-Christian or homophobic—comics can’t be ‘art’ except in some antiseptic, ivory tower and thus irrelevant sense.”

May 9
Houston, TX
 – In the Houston Chronicle, Washington-based columnist Cragg Hines commented on the papal trip to the Mideast by noting “in about 797 years a pope will go to Israel and apologize for John Paul II.” Hines wrote that the pope might be “an unhelpful player in the Middle East or even an accomplice to Palestinian violence?” He then referred to Pope Pius XII as being “unconscionably unmoved” by Nazi persecution of the Jews. The column also appeared in the Rock Island Argus and the Berkshire Eagle.

May 9
Southampton, NY
 – A Southampton Press letter to the editor charged that “The Catholic Church is tearing America apart with the abortion issue, so they can take over.”

May 12
Palm Springs, CA
 – A column in the Palm Springs Desert Sun by William Edelen, identified as a former minister at the First Congregational Church in Tacoma, WA, presented a wide-ranging attack against the Catholic Church. He accuses the Church of killing “millions and millions of human beings” through the centuries and leaving a “legacy that has produced sexism, racism, the desecration of the natural environment and the intolerance of other world spiritual traditions.”

May 12
Fort Worth, TX
 – The Star-Telegram ran a series of quotes in its pages under the title, “Words We Like.” Included was a quote from Erica Jong: “Every country gets the circus it deserves. Spain gets the bullfights. Italy gets the Catholic Church. America gets Hollywood.”

May 13
Fort Wayne, IN
 – In a column in the Fort Wayne Journal Gazette, critic Steve Penhollow commended Terrence McNally’s play “Corpus Christi” as “good for Christianity.” The play portrays a Christ figure who has sex with the Apostles. Penhollow dismissed complaints about the play, comparing them to protests against “Yo Mama’s Last Supper,” a photograph at the Brooklyn Museum of Art where a naked woman replaces Jesus in a portrayal of the Last Supper.

May 13
Santa Barbara, CA
 – The Santa Barbara News-Press printed a column by William Elden titled, “Apology for Christianity.” Among Elden’s claims: “The Christian church all but wiped out education, science, medicine, art and commerce (in the years 500 to 1000).”

May 14
Ft. Lauderdale, FL
 – In a letter to the editor of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel, Pius XII is identified as “the main inspirer and prosecutor of the policy in Vietnam.” The pope died before JFK sent troops to Vietnam.

May 20
Little Rock, AK
 – The Arkansas Democrat Gazette ran an editorial alleging silence on the part of Catholic popes. In particular, the piece criticized Pope John Paul II for not engaging in a debate with Syrian leaders when they made anti-Semitic statements while hosting the pope. It then compared the incident to the alleged “silence” of Pope Pius XII about the Holocaust during World War II. The editorial appeared in other newspapers as an opinion piece under the byline of Paul Greenberg. The charge is slanderous.

May 25
New Bern, NC
 – The Sun Journal ran a Paul Greenberg column titled, “How evil prospers: the silence of the popes.” Greenberg wrote that Pope John Paul II should have seized the moment and spoken out against Syrian leaders’ comments that were considered anti-Semitic. He then compared the incident to the alleged “silence” of Pope Pius XII about the Holocaust during Word War II. Such slander is not legitimate criticism.

May 30
Houston, TX
 – Cragg Hines of the Houston Chronicle wrote a column about Pope Pius XII’s alleged “silence” about the massacre of Jews during World War II. In rebuffing a letter from Bishop Joseph Fiorenza, Hines dismissed evidence that Pius was responsible for saving as many as 860,000 Jews during the war. Instead, he quoted Susan Zuccotti’s Under His Very Windows: The Vatican and the Holocaust in Italy, going so far as to say Pius failed not only the Jews, but members of his own faith as well. It was vintage Hines

June 3
Santa Barbara, CA
 – The Santa Barbara News-Press, under the banner “Memorable Quotes,” ran this comment comedian Bill Maher made on his television show: “Pope John Paul today confirmed his opposition to gay marriage. He said they were unnatural. Then he put on a pointy hat, his dress and returned to never having sex at all.”

June 6
New York, NY
 – The New York Press printed a comic strip called “Rehabilitating Mr. Wiggles,” by Neil Swaab. The strip could not be reprinted in the Catholic League’s 2001 Annual Report on Anti-Catholicism because of its vulgarity. It featured a teddy bear-like character in a conversation with Jesus. The bear comes across a cat and ponders whether to kick it. He asks, “What would Jesus do?” Jesus answers, “I’d kick its face in…and just forgive myself afterward.” The bear kicks the cat as the Jesus character says, “Make that f—– bleed!”

June 7
Nickolasville, KY 
– The Jessamine Journal featured guest columnist Dwight A. Moody, dean of the chapel of Georgetown College. His column was titled, “If I Could Pick the Pope.” Moody’s tone went beyond normal criticism and ventured into disrespect and contempt. One of his main complaints was how the pope dresses. He wrote, “There is still too much pomp and ceremony, too many ornaments and vestments, bells and whistles, that distinguish this spiritual leader from both the Savior he obeys and the people he leads.” Moody also had a problem with priestly celibacy saying, “If I could pick the pope, I would look for a man with one wife and at least five children. That would make him a good Catholic and able to understand his people.”

June 12
Terre Haute, IN
 – The Tribune-Star accepted and printed an advertisement by the Eternal Gospel Church that attacked the Catholic Church. The “Earth’s Final Warning” ad called the Church the “Whore of Babylon.” Among other charges, the ad also claimed the pope and the United States were hatching a secret plan to achieve world domination.

June 20
New York, NY
 – The New York Press published a comic strip called “Rehabilitating Mr. Wiggles,” by Neil Swaab. The comic strip was too obscene to reprint in the Catholic League’s 2001 Annual Report on Anti-Catholicism. It feaured a hypothetical conversation between a teddy bear-like character and Jesus. The bear asks Jesus, “How come I can only see you after I’ve been huffing aerosal for hours on end?” To which Jesus replies, “Because that s— f—- you up like nobody’s business.”

June 22
San Francisco, CA
 – Joan Ryan, columnist for the San Francisco Chronicle, wrote a piece about Catholic bishops upholding the ban on tubal ligations and vasectomies at Catholic-run hospitals. She used the opportunity to take on the Church as an institution. She wrote, “…to follow Catholic doctrine in today’s world demands a suspension of common sense that surely challenges even the most devout followers.” Of the Catholic hierarchy she wrote, “One can’t help but wonder if the Catholic Church has been taken over by sociological researchers conducting a massive experiment on faith.”

June 24
Framingham, MA
 – Columnist Joan Ryan’s piece on the Catholic Church and its teachings appeared in the MetroWest Daily News.

June 25
Geneva, IL
 – Columnist Joan Ryan’s piece on the Catholic Church and its teachings appeared in the Kane County Chronicle.

June 25
Atchinson, KS
 – Columnist Joan Ryan’s piece on the Catholic Church and its teachings appeared in the Atchinson Daily Globe.

June 25
Griffin, GA
 – Columnist Joan Ryan’s piece on the Catholic Church and its teachings appeared in the Griffin Daily News.

June 29
Connellsville, PA
 – Columnist Joan Ryan’s piece on the Catholic Church and its teachings appeared in the Daily Courier.

June 29
Sun City, AZ
 – Columnist Joan Ryan’s piece on the Catholic Church and its teachings appeared in the Daily News-Sun.

June 29
Memphis, TN
 – Accompanying a column on the national embryonic stem cell research by syndicated columnist Charles Krauthammer, the Commercial Appeal printed a cartoon showing those opposed to the federal funding of the research as living in a cave and opposing scientific advances throughout history. It clearly stoked the fires of anti-Catholicism.

July 2
West Corvina, CA
 – Columnist Joan Ryan’s piece on the Catholic Church and its teachings appeared in the San Gabriel Valley Tribune.

July 7
Evansville, IN
 – Evansville Courier-Press columnist Ross Meny wrote an article about the Catholic Church’s alleged involvement in electoral politics. It was replete with deliberate misrepresentations. He wrote, “To accomplish these [the Church’s] goals, the hierarchy devised a plan. Its members wined and dined Republican legislators, convincing them that they spoke for most Catholics. Then they told the people in the pews that the Republican party best represented their social agenda. Unbelievably, it worked. The majority of Catholics voted for George Bush.”

July 10
San Francisco, CA
 – Stephanie Salter wrote a piece in the San Francisco Chroniclecritical of the Bush administration’s position on abortion and embryonic stem cell research. But she could not stop at disagreement on the issue. She went on to say, “George W. Bush, along with the ever-regressing Catholic hierarchy and similar radical Christian bullies, insists that the practice [harvesting stem cells from human embryos] destroys ‘life’ and is therefore the same as abortion, or their definition of murder.”

July 11
New York, NY
 – The New York Press ran a comic strip called “Rehabilitating Mr. Wiggles” by Neil Swaab. The strip, which was too vulgar for the Catholic League to reproduce in its 2001 Annual Report featured a conversation between a teddy bear-like character and Jesus. The non-sensical conversation ended with the bear aluding to a homosexual experience only to tell Jesus, “Relax Jesus, I’m just f—— with ya.”

July 18
San Francisco, CA
 – The San Francisco Chronicle published an ad by the Sweetwater Seventh Day Adventist church called “Earth’s Final Warning.” Among other things, the ad calls the Catholic Church the “Whore of Babylon” and accuses the Vatican of conspiracy with the United States government for world domination. Brian Kokes, national advertising manager for the newspaper, said prior to publishing the ad, the Chronicle staff reviewed and approved it for both the morning and evening editions.

July 26
Philadelphia, PA
 – The Northeast Times printed an editorial on an internal controversy at St. Anselm’s Elementary School. The mother of a former student wanted to award scholarships to 10 graduating students in memory of her son, a firstgrader who died from a seizure. But school policy dictated that the faculty determine who gets any scholarships. The two sides could not agree on the awarding of the scholarships. The Northeast Times editorial blamed the situation on the school officials. It said they “should have stepped aside” and lectured them about their own “house rules.” No instance of the Northeast Times editorializing on the internal practices of other religions has been seen.

July 28
New York, NY
 – The New York Post, in its on-going fake gambling column on its sports page, contained the following extra note: “Father Tim Pasek’s Tips for Dating Priests (second in a series by the newly wedded former Queens pastor): Practice safe sex religiously, but never, ever, use a holey [sic] condom.”

August 18
Portland, OR
 – The Oregonian newspaper printed an advertisement for a website. The heading on the ad was, “Wanted: The Virgin Mary—Dead AND Alive.” The reader was then directed to a web address. The website advertised a free book advocating anti-Catholic rhetoric as it pertains to Catholic beliefs about the Virgin Mary.

September 1
San Jose, CA
 – The alternative newspaper The Wave published a satirical piece about unusual phobias. Among them was “Papaphobia,” or fear of the pope. It said the following: “People who fear the pope obviously have a good sense of history. Popes in the late-middle-ages declared war on other countries for the sake of acquiring land, Renaissance popes fathered children and insisted on their nephews succeeding them (hence the term, nepotism), and—recently documented in the book Hitler’s Pope—Pope Pius XII was aware and yet remained ambivalent to Hitler’s plans during World War II. Need we say more?”

September 2
Boise, ID
 – The Idaho Statesman printed the “Earth’s Final Warning” advertisement calling the Catholic Church the “Whore of Babylon” and accusing the Vatican and the United States government of conspiring to control the world. The ad was placed by the Eternal Gospel Church.

September 20
San Francisco, CA
 – On September 20, the San Francisco Examiner published an article by one of its contributors, Kimberly Blaker, that accused the Catholic Church of organizing and supporting “clones” of Islamic terrorism. In addition, the Catholic League was branded a “violent” organization.
After criticizing Rev. Jerry Falwell for his remarks blaming the ACLU, gays and lesbians, et al. for secularizing America (thus contributing to the reasons why the World Trade Center and Pentagon were attacked), Blaker wrote, “The irony is that the Islamic terrorists responsible for the Sept. 11 fatalities are merely clones of America’s own Christian Right extremists, sheathed in a different religion.” Later in her column, she wrote, “The Catholic Church is one of the main organizers and supporters behind the Christian Right.” Blaker also hurled charges at the Catholic League, saying that “while less violent in nature” than some other groups, the league was still a threat to liberty.
Catholic League president William Donohue asked the San Francisco Examiner to provide him with the evidence, drawn from criminal records, that the Catholic League is a violent organization. Michael Stoll, an official at the newspaper, told Donohue that while his criticisms were “valid,” what Blaker wrote was nonetheless her opinion.

October 12
Bronx, NY
 – The Parkchester News contained an article about Islam by Daniel Gesselein. In one paragraph Gesselein wrote, ” ‘A Mosque is nothing more than four walls and a floor,’ Mohammad said. This is because unlike Catholicism, Islam does not believe in idol worship. There are no statues or paintings of any religious leaders including the Prophet Muhammad.”
Following a number of complaints, Gosselein wrote a correction saying the line should have read, “unlike Catholicism, Islam does not believe in the placement of statues or stained glass windows in their house of worship.”

October 14
Leesburg, FL
 – The Eternal Gospel Church, a splinter group of the Seventh Day Adventists, placed an ad in the pages of the Daily Commercial newspaper. The ad demonized the Catholic Church as the “Whore of Babylon” and as a conspirator for world domination. The Catholic League protested, as did local Catholics, and Jim Perry, the publisher, apologized.

October 21
Boston, MA
 – Boston Globe columnist Maureen Dezell wrote positively about playwright Christopher Durang, who is famous for “Sister Mary Ignatius Explains It All for You.” Dezell wrote that when the play opened in Boston a number of years ago, it was criticized for “anti-Catholic bigotry.” She puts the phrase in quotes so readers know she doesn’t think the play is anti-Catholic. After mentioning that the Catholic League protested the play when it opened, Dezell calls the league “a headline-grabbing group that has no official connection with the Catholic Church and represents the views of a minority of the church’s members.”
At the time of the play, the Catholic League’s protest was joined by the Anti-Defamation League, the National Conference of Christians and Jews, and the American Jewish Committee. Dezell failed to mention this.

October 23
New York, NY
 – The Village Voice had a piece on the “Best of NYC”—the best of New York City. One of its items was the “Best Place to Spill Beer on the Pope.” It was the only religion-related item in the article.

October 28
New York, NY
 – Randy Cohen in the New York Times wrote a piece on the online bookstore, Amazon.com, that discussed how the company deals with issues of censorship. Cohen gratuitously mentioned that Amazon.com still carries Roman Catholic books even though the Church does not allow women priests. He failed to mention that Orthodox Judaism doesn’t allow women rabbis.

November 21
New York, NY
 – An article in the New York Press by Michelangelo Signorile equated Pope John Paul II with Osama bin Laden. The story started, “Flash! This just in: All the while that Afghanistan’s ruling Taliban has been protecting Osama bin Laden, Italy has been harboring another omnipotent religious zealot, one who equally condemns us Western sinners and incites violence with his incendiary rhetoric.” The pope, Signorile said, was guilty of “inspiring thugs across the globe who commit hate crimes against homosexuals, a form of terrorism if ever there were one.” The article was titled, “The Gay-Bashing Pope.”

December 9
Minneapolis, MN 
– The Star Tribune printed on its op-ed page a “Counterpoint” piece by Joe Selvaggio of Minneapolis about the practice of re-using condoms. Selvaggio blamed the Church’s opposition to condom use for the fact condoms were being re-used. He ended his piece by writing, “I pray [the pope] will soon have the courage to apologize to the millions of poor who have suffered and even died because of the church’s attitude toward condoms.”

December 12
Grande Island, NE 
– The Grande Island Independent newspaper ran the “Earth’s Final Warning” advertisement placed by the Eternal Gospel Church. The ad alleges a conspiracy between the Vatican and the United States government. Among the charges against the Church is that it is the “Whore of Babylon.”


PERIODICALS
January
The January issue of the Philadelphia Trumpet featured an article that alleged Germany and the Vatican were plotting to take over the world. The article was called “Holy Blitzkreig.”

January
The January 2001 issue of Esquire presented a satirical “sermon” from the Vatican’s “Pontifical Academy of Life.” The “sermon” was presented as the Vatican’s response to the Clinton administration’s allowing of federal funding for embryonic stem cell research. The “sermon” has the Vatican refuting that “God is good” and concludes by stating that “God hates the Jews.”

January
In the January-February issue of FHM, billed as a “men’s magazine,” under the headline “Cure for boredom” is a report on a website where one can dress up Christ on the cross in everything from bunny slippers to a tuxedo. The magazine reports that “users can dress the miraculous wine-maker in a variety of hip and fashionable outfits,” and place a “Hang in there, Baby!” sign on the Cross. “It’s up to you to decide whether the Son of God is suiting up for the Packers, heading for a dip at the local Y or making a grand entrance at a 70s party.”

January 4
New York, NY
 – The January 4-11 issue of Time Out New York, a glossy magazine with a gay edge that covers New York social and cultural events, featured a “best and worst” of 2000. Under the Gay and Lesbian section, the top listing for “Best” was: “Cardinal John O’Connor kicks the bucket: The press eulogized him as a saint, when in fact, the pious creep was a stuck-in-the-1950s, antigay menace. Good riddance!” After protests from the Catholic League, Time Out New York issued an apology that the league rejected. A resolution condemning the comment unanimously passed in the New York City Council.

February 6
The online magazine Salon.com featured an excerpt from “The Erotica Project.” The excerpt was written by Lillian Ann Slugocki, co-author of the volume with Erin Cressida Wilson. The excerpt is a graphic description of Christ and Mary Magdalene having oral sex.

March
Women.com, a feminist website, ran an ad in the March issue of Redbook. Among the listings in the ad was the comment that for every hundred women, “.5 carry an insurance policy against immaculate conception.”

June 25
The Industry Standard featured an opinion column by Steve Bodow that is listed under “Religion.” The entire column was a satirical “letter” to the pope. The pope is commended for forbidding “the taking of communion via Federal Express” and banning the cell-phone administration of the Last Rites. The writer takes exception to the recent announcement that Confession may never be over the Internet, because “It turns out that our faithful besmirch themselves a great deal more often, in more ways and with far greater enthusiasm than we had previously had any reason to believe.”
He writes of other concerns, such as the new computer system diverting the “venal [sic]” sins to mortal. He asks if the viewing of “unclean” websites is more or less offensive if you pay the fee. He points out that “repetitious penances” are useless because you can copy and paste the prayers. The pope is addressed as “Your Whiteness.” The statement is made, “In stark contrast to you, Your Grace, our technical team is in fact deeply fallible.” At the end the pope is asked to e-mail or “send me something on vellum.”
The magazine folded in August.

August
Edmund, OK
 – The August edition of the Philadelphia Trumpet contained two features dealing with the Catholic Church. One called “The Last Crusade” claimed there are plans underway for another crusade and “it will be the bloodiest of all.” The second, “Final Pieces Fall Into Place,” claims a conspiracy between Germany and the Vatican in the Balkans.

September
FHM, billed as a “men’s magazine,” included a section called “100 Mighty Sex Facts!” by Keith Beardon. Included in a list of homosexual or bisexual people are Pope Paul II and Pope Julius III. Another section lists the “man on top position” as the only sexual act acceptable to the Catholic Church. Another “fact” listed is that 15% of priests and nuns “break their vows of chastity.”
Contained in the same issue is an article about a man who dresses like Jesus to lure women into having sex with him.

September
Cornerstone Publishing issued a booklet called Behold He Cometh spouting the same anti-Catholic elements of the “Earth’s Final Warning” newspaper ads. The booklet charged the Catholic Church is the “Whore of Babylon” and misrepresents the Bible.

September
Wired published a story and pictures about a display of mock products by the Boston-based collective “Release1,” which was on display at Boston’s Revolving Museum. One of the items was called “Mass-snax: an EZ-open, single-serving pack of holy wine and communion wafers for drive-thru Christian culture.”

October
Esquire magazine published a series of comedic poems called “This Way Out” by Mike Reiss. One poem was titled “Papal Bull-N., A decree of Church Dogma.” It read:
I never read a papal bull,
Nor do I hope to read one.
But judging from their staple bull
I’d rather read than heed one.

December 3
New York, NY
 – A story and photo article in New York magazine about unusual dogs in New York City showed a full-page photo of a dog dressed in a nun’s habit, wearing a big cross around his neck. There was no other religious imagery anywhere in the photo spread.


RADIO

February 11
San Diego, CA
 – On the “Lynn Harper Show” on KOGO-AM, the host started to bash Mother Teresa. Callers who tried to defend Mother Teresa were dismissed. One caller then joined the host in bashing Mother Teresa and Catholics, particularly Catholics in Mexico.

February 22
New York, NY
 – On the “Curtis and Kuby” radio show on WABC, the hosts used news of the papal consistory in Rome to say that the Catholic Church burns incense to chase away evil spirits. They advised listeners to forget about calling the rock artist Eminem a homophobe and misogynist because the real homophobes and misogynists were in Rome.

February 28
Washington, DC
 – “The Don and Mike Show” broadcast on WJFK-FM aired a segment called “Ass Wednesday.” Don Geronimo and Mike O’Meara, the hosts, had a contest to find the listener with the biggest buttocks. The contestants were then brought into the studio where they were “blessed” by using brown lipstick to paint a cross on their forehead while saying, “In the name of the Father…” The hosts then got into a discussion over O’Meara’s “Catholic guilt.”

March 1
Long Island, NY
 – On the “Chaz and AJ” morning show on WRCN-FM, the hosts mocked celibacy and took several general shots at priests. The general manager apologized after receiving complaints.

March 26
On the syndicated “Bob and Tom Show,” a comment was made on a news story concerning the body of Pope John XXIII being found incorrupt during an exhumation. The hosts commented, “Was an altar boy found with him in the coffin?”

July
Boston, MA
 – WRKO talk show host Howie Carr discussed the topic of allowing priests to marry. He commented that if Catholic priests were allowed to marry it would cut down on the incidents of pedophilia. Carr fielded several callers who made allegations such as all the popes of the Middle Ages had sons. The callers went unchallenged.

August 1
Rockford, IL
 – WNTA-AM aired the “Good News Radio Program,” hosted by Gary Petty and produced by the United Church of God. The show referred to the seat of Rome spreading an ancient religion of Babylon and the woman riding the beast. It then referenced the Catholic Church as a religious and political enemy stripping the liberties from those who do not follow it.

August 15
San Francisco, CA
 – KSFO talk show host Lee Rodgers read a “listener’s joke” about the Virgin Mary. The joke, told on the Feast of the Assumption of Mary, said Mary was impregnated by Joseph the same way African Bishop Emmanuel Milingo impregnated his wife. In declining to apologize following a written complaint from a Catholic listener, Rodgers went further, writing in an e-mail to the complainant, “I know the Catholic Church has a long record of trying to stifle dissenting opinion, but I had no idea modern Catholics were so determined to pursue even a silly little joke.

August 18
Cody, WY
 – KTAG-FM ran an advertisement for Maverick Country Stores featuring a bus load of nuns on the way to Our Lady of Guadalupe Shrine. The ad makes ridiculing reference about the nuns stopping at the country store and buying rulers, fish, wafers and wine.

December 5
Leesburg, FL
 – Dr. Daniel Civic made several derogatory statements about the Catholic Church in his role as radio host on WLBE-AM. On his show “Voice of the Truth,” Civic said, among other things: the September 11 terrorist attacks were the fault of the Catholic Church; Catholic religious leaders deserve to be in prison and should be executed; Islam is part of the Catholic religion; and the Catholic Church started World Wars I and II to destroy the Jews, Protestants and Muslims.


TELEVISION

January 26
Oklahoma City, OK
 – Two men were executed in Oklahoma for a 1985 murder at a local grocery store. During a broadcast on KOCO-TV the day of the execution of one of the men, reporter Steve Voelker discussed the Catholic upbringing of the man. The fact that he was a nephew of a Catholic priest was raised often during news reports of the execution. When the second man was executed, no mention was made of his background.

February 8
Bill Maher, host of ABC’s “Politically Incorrect,” apologized for a January show in which he stated that dogs “are like retarded children.” Maher has never apologized for previous anti-Catholic remarks broadcast on the show. On the February 8 broadcast, Maher inserted Christ into a discussion of Alcoholics Anonymous, which then led to attacks on religion. Comedian Richard Belzer charged that Mother Teresa “took tons of money from very shady people.” She was then accused of never opening a clinic for dying children in Calcutta.

February 15
Ellen DeGeneres played a nun on NBC’s “Will and Grace.” Degeneres’ character stated that she was taken to the convent when she was three, thinking she was going to the zoo. “All I wanted to do was see the penguins. Ironic, isn’t it?” she said, dressed in an old-fashioned habit. The show concluded with the nun declaring, “Big day for me. I’m not wearing a bra.”

February 18
The CBS show “60 Minutes” did a segment on the DeBeers company’s worldwide control of the diamond industry. James Twitchell of the University of Florida was asked if there was ever a time in history when one institution exercised this much control. He replied, “Holy Roman Catholic Church, which was selling a different kind of product—salvation, generically.” The Catholic League questioned why the statement, a non-sequitur that had nothing to do with the issue at hand, was included in the “60 Minutes” segment.

February 26
FOX’s “Ally McBeal” depicted a dream sequence where the main character is on a flight to visit her boyfriend. A nun sitting next to her questions her about her sex life with her boyfriend and begins to recommend various contraceptives such as condoms, diaphragms, etc.

May 17
The season finale of NBC’s “The West Wing” featured the President character Josiah Bartlett engaging in a diatribe (half in English, half in Latin) against God after his assistant had been killed in a car crash. Among the things he said were, “To hell with your punishments. I was your servant on Earth. And I spread your word and I did your work. To hell with your punishments. To hell with you.”

May 27
The Showtime movie channel aired a filmed production of “Sister Mary Ignatius Explains It All For You,” a vicious anti-Catholic play written by Christopher Durang. The play features a malicious nun confronted by four of her past students, all of whom are dysfunctional in some way as a result of their Catholic upbringing. Catholic belief and devotions are bashed throughout the play and, at the climax, the nun kills two of her former students. The director of the performance, Marshall Brickman, justified the play’s attack on Catholicism by stating that “any institution that backed the Inquisition, the crusades and the Roman position on the Holocaust deserves to be the butt of a couple of jokes.” In a full-page ad that appeared in the May 14, 2001 edition of Variety, the Catholic League asked Sumner Redstone, chairman of Viacom, to condemn the production. Mr. Redstone refused to do so.

May 31
CNN newsperson Greta Van Susteren reported the recent marriage of renegade Catholic archbishop Emmanuel Milingo. She interviewed George Stallings, a former priest who was excommunicated in 1989 when he broke with the Catholic Church. No Catholic priest in good standing was interviewed to comment on the other side of the issue. In her opening remarks, Van Susteren said, “If there’s one thing the Catholic Church doesn’t like, it’s a loose cannon.” She then said in reference to Milingo’s marriage, “there were no best wishes from the Vatican.”

June 26
MTV’s “Andy Dick Show” featured the star performing a rap song that had numerous references to Jesus. One line was (speaking as Jesus), “For me to get out of pain, all I need is to spend some time with Mary Magdalene. All you have to do is 69, to change the water into wine.”

June 30
The “Howard Stern Show” on E! Entertainment television featured an appearance by porn star Rebecca Lord. When she said she had a comment to make about religion, Stern gave her the okay. Lord complained about the Catholic Church for being critical of her line of work. At that point Stern jumped in saying, “Catholic priests are having sex with young boys.”
Stern added that those who work in the pornography industry were healthier than Catholic priests. In an angry voice, he charged that priests show boys pornography so they can molest them. Then his companion Robin Quivers commented that the Catholic Church would like to stop Lord from practicing her profession.
The Catholic League asked the major sponsor of the show, Miller Brewing Company, to drop its sponsorship of the show. The company said it would stick by Stern because the decision to sponsor the show is based on what “our customers are telling us they want to see and hear.”

July 10
The show “Witchblade” on TNT (Turner Network Television) featured a story involving time travel, Hitler and Pope Pius XII. The hero of the series goes back in time to World War II. In the course of her investigation, it is revealed that there was “an unholy bargain” between Pope Pius XII and Hitler. Under the alliance Hitler agrees to leave the Vatican alone as long as the pope remains silent about Nazi atrocities. As a symbol of the deal, Hitler is given the witchblade.

September 2
Hollywood, CA
 – Aaron Sorkin, executive producer and chief writer for the NBC series “The West Wing” told the New York Times he wanted to push the limits of dialogue on television even further than currently exists. Sorkin said he hopes to break the longstanding network taboo this coming television season. He wants a character to curse in a way that uses the Lord’s name in vain.

September 3
The Jerry Lewis Telethon featured a segment with comedienne Cathy Ladman. Her routine included a story about going to a Catholic wedding and how it took so long to receive Communion. She said when she finally got to the priest, she stuck out her tongue and yelled, “Give me some Jesus.” She then went on to say she understands why Catholics see “apparitions” and were “delusional”—because “they were starved.”

October 17
The NBC show “Law and Order: Criminal Intent” had a story line that revolved around a sexton murdered by a junkie. The junkie, who works at the parish, is then killed by another priest. The killer priest is also guilty of embezzling church funds. The priest tells the police that the junkie was his lover. Later in the show it is revealed the priest was lying: the junkie is actually the priest’s son. It is now clear that the real motive for killing the junkie was to protect the young boy’s mother—the woman the killer priest had an affair with 20 years earlier.
The Catholic League noted that the “Law and Order” series has a long track record of story lines that portray Catholics negatively.

November 4
The NBC miniseries “Uprising,” about the Warsaw Ghetto uprising, depicted a priest on Easter Sunday closing the church’s windows and proceeding with the service after detecting smoke from the ghetto’s burning buildings and bodies. The show’s author, Jon Avnet, was quoted as saying that his account is historically accurate. The Catholic League asked that Avnet supply the evidence that this priest did what he was accused of. Avnet never replied.


INTERNET

January 12
The website Usqueers.com started a new feature called “Good Riddance.” It was based on the piece in 2000 by the alternative New York periodical Time Out New York in which the publication praised the passing of John Cardinal O’Connor. Usqueers.com said Time Out New York didn’t go far enough. Therefore, the Internet site planned to name people who die—and opposed their views when they lived—under the banner, “Good Riddance.”

February 6
The online magazine Salon featured an excerpt from “The Erotica Project,” written by Lillian Ann Slugocki, co-author of the volume with Erin Cressida Wilson. The excerpt is a graphic description of Christ and Mary Magdalene having oral sex.

March
A website called “Father Frankie’s Drive-Thru Confessional: The Roamin’ Cadillak Church” is hosted by Stairwell Studios. The website consists of three pages: an introduction, a page to “confess” your sins, and an “absolution” page.

May 8
On the Drudge Report website a picture of actor Robert Blake appeared dressed as a priest in a story about his alleged role in killing his wife. Blake is known primarily for his role as a detective on “Baretta.” After the Catholic League complained, the photo was removed.

June 5
“Wired.com” ran an article about computer viruses sent via e-mail, and how their titles are designed to get people to open the e-mails. In using a virus named after Jennifer Lopez as an example, author Michelle Delio quoted computer expert Marquis Grove as saying, “To someone who doesn’t care about Lopez this worm is roughly the same as saying, ‘CLICK HERE to see Mother Theresa [sic] butt naked.’ Frankly, I don’t think there is enough beer in India that would convince me to click that button. I simply have no interest and I could care less what Mother Theresa [sic] looks like in the buff. And oh my god [sic], now I have that image in my mind and I can’t shake it out…argh! The Horror…the horror.”

June 6
Cartoonist Neil Swaab featured on his website material from his book of cartoons, the title of which is too vulgar to reprint. One of the cartoons was of a Catholic school girl saying, “My daddy loves me…he loves every night…but I won’t tell Mommy because it’s our little secret….One day Daddy caught me making out with a boy and he called me a slut and sent me to Catholic school…now I know it’s wrong to love anyone but God and Daddy. Hail Satan!” In the right-hand corner of the cartoon was a cross.

June 20
The website “thedude.org” under the heading “In God We Trust” posted a picture of Christ kneeling down with a child’s head in his lap with his hand on the child’s neck. The website has a special effect that makes the Christ figure pull the child’s head into his midsection back and forth, simulating fellatio.

July 5
The website “suspectthoughts” ran an article by Ron Gibson titled “St. Agnes g— d— on the Virgin Mary.” The article was a fictional story of sexual fantasy involving priests, saints and other Catholic images.

July 8
The website “jesusfoodnetwork.com” was dedicated to ridiculing believers in Jesus by offering different “recipes” for eating Jesus including Roast Suckling Jesus, Kentucky Fried Jesus, Braised Jesus and pasta and Jesus Pot pie. The website’s main page including a quote from the Gospel of Matthew, “Take, eat, this is my body.”

August 22
The Internet magazine Bits n’ Bites, which bills itself as containing strange facts and trivia, featured a section about popes called “Famous Figures.” Among the charges made in this feature: Pope Leo X denied the existence of Christ; Pope John XII raped female pilgrims to Rome; Pope John VII was actually a woman. The publication gave absolutely no sources for the allegations.

November 1
A website called “iVillage: Where women find answers” contained an article about safe sex. Next to it was a picture of a nun holding forth a condom.

November 28
The Internet magazine Salon carried an interview with Hustler publisher Larry Flynt. In the interview, Flynt said, “For two millennia Catholicism has been to trying the wring the neck of every other organized religion in the world.”

November 29
Annapolis, MD
 – Hackers attacked the website of St. Mary’s Church. The face of Rev. Denis Sweeney was replaced by a blinking, devilish goat’s head inside a pentagram, followed by a message about Satan. Police believe a group called “hacking for Satan” was responsible for this and other attacks against websites of religious groups.

December
The website “Papal Porn” shows images of nuns, priests and popes that turn into pornographic images when the cursor is placed over the pictures. The site advertises itself by saying, “This site contains pictures of naked Nuns and Priests and Catholic School Girls engaged in the Holy sacrament of Sex.”

December 3
The Internet portal Yahoo! displayed a bias against Catholics that it refused to correct. When the word “Catholic” is typed in the search engine, the second of the Category Matches has a listing called “Christian History > Catholic Inquisition.” By clicking on that category, the listings of “Torture” and “Witch Hunts” appear. No such negative topics associated with other religions were listed.
When “Catholicism” was typed in, the first listing under Web Site Matches was “The Case Against Catholicism.” It consists mainly of the work of “Joseph McCabe’s Rationalist Encyclopedia.” The second listing is called “Gay and Lesbian Catholicism”; it was loaded with criticism of the Church’s teachings on sexuality. Interestingly, the official Vatican website, “The Holy See,” was listed fourth.

December 13
The Internet auction site eBay featured an item for auction called the “Weird Tattooed Jesus Statue.” It depicted Jesus with three eyes, vampire teeth and a dagger on his chest. The base was covered with roses and green painted skulls. The item was pulled from the eBay site following a complaint from the Catholic League.

December 18
The Internet auction site eBay had up for auction a compact disc by the British band The Grey Wolves. The name of the CD was “Catholic Priests F— Children.” There was a sketch of naked boys and girls on the cover and a picture of a Catholic priest. The item was pulled from the listings by eBay following a complaint by the Catholic League.




Miscellaneous

January 4
New York, NY
 – Jack Chick’s anti-Catholic pamphlets were distributed in various New York City phone booths. The pamphlet is called “Last Rites” and described a practicing Catholic being condemned to Hell by Jesus because he believed in the “false teachings” of the Catholic Church.

January 21-22
Edison, NJ
 – Vandals desecrated a statue of the Blessed Virgin Mary at Our Lady of Peace Catholic Church in Edison, NJ in the late evening or early morning. They smeared red paint on the statue as well as on the church’s stone steps and wooden door.

January 30
Washington, DC
 – In the controversy over pardons granted by President Bill Clinton at the end of his term, overlooked was the one granted to Mel Reynolds, the former Illinois congressman jailed in 1994 for having sex with a minor and solicitation of child pornography. A primary exhibit against Reynolds was a tape of an explicit phone conversation he had with an underage girlfriend. The former congressman proclaims his good luck at the prospect of engaging in a sexual threesome with his own girlfriend and a 15-year-old Catholic schoolgirl.

February
In Vanity Fair, actress Lara Flynn Boyle, the star of ABC’s “The Practice,” complained about her Catholic upbringing. She stated that she “got a terrible education from the nuns and the Jesuits” because they “kept flunking me and saying I wasn’t participating.” Boyle also stated that she “used to lie in the confessional all the time” and considered herself a “bastard” because her father had his first marriage annulled.

February
In Talk magazine, actress Heather Graham of “Austin Powers” movie fame blamed the Catholic Church for stifling her sex life when she was growing up. “Why do I have to do what all these men are saying?” Graham was quoted, and added, “Why is a woman’s sexuality supposed to be evil?”

February 13
Tucson, AZ
 – The historic San Xavier del Bac, a 203-year-old Catholic mission outside Tucson, was vandalized. Vandals smashed and spray-painted statues and walls. They also damaged a small adobe building that had served as the mortuary chapel. The gravesites of two priests buried inside the chapel in the 18th and 19th centuries were splattered with paint, and rosaries and photos were strewn about.

February 15
McMinnville, OR
 – Vandals at St. James Church destroyed a century-old statue of the Madonna. The pastor of the church, Father Tom Farley, called the act sacrilegious and said the congregation “felt personally violated.”

February 18
Pittsfield, MA
 – At Notre Dame Church, teenage vandals who had also trashed a Jewish cemetery burned a picture of Christ, tossed pieces of Communion wafers around the church, and left derogatory notes about Catholicism. Most of the guilty were arrested and charged with a hate crime.

February 18
Tucson, AZ
 – Vandals again struck San Xavier del Bac when three statues were broken. Later in the evening a statue of Our Lady of Guadalupe was found covered in motor oil and smoldering.

March
New York, NY
 – Vicious hate mail was sent to William Donohue over Catholic League protests of “Yo Mama’s Last Supper” at the Brooklyn Museum of Art. An obscene note included a self-made “postcard” with a drawing of a man performing oral sex on Christ nailed to the cross.

March
Lodi, CA
 – A booklet was sent to the Catholic League offices. Published by Manna Ministries, “Is the Virgin Mary Dead or Alive?” was written by a supposed former Catholic who attacked the Blessed Virgin Mary as a continuance of pagan Roman practices. The author identified the “Roman Catholic system” as “antichrist.”

March 6
Washington, DC
 – CNN founder Ted Turner stunned CNN employees in Washington on Ash Wednesday. Seeing ashes on the forehead of some workers, Turner said, “What are you? A bunch of Jesus freaks? You should be working for FOX.” When CNN corporate offices refused to confirm or deny that Turner made the statement, the Catholic League reminded media that in the past Turner had branded Christianity a religion for “losers,” labeled pro-life Christians as “Bozos,” made an ethnic joke at the expense of the pope at a pro-abortion meeting, and blasted Christianity as “very intolerant.” After the league statement was picked up by the media, Turner issued a statement of apology for his Ash Wednesday comments.

March 10
Topeka, KS
 – Vandals broke a life-sized marble statue of Christ located in Topeka’s Mount Calvary Cemetery.

March 10
New York, NY
 – Rabbi Mordechai Friedman spewed hate talk aimed at the pope, the Church and the Catholic League on public access television in New York. He has called the pope “a dumb Pollock” and a “stinking old cocker.” He has branded the Catholic League “Nazis.” Friedman also despises Jews with which he disagrees and said there is cause to “assassinate” the “evil” Senator Joseph Lieberman.

March 11
The Catholic League was attacked in hate mail for alleged hypocrisy. Noting that the League has questioned conduct during the Gay Pride March, an e-mail from “Virgin Kronch” said the league was “silent” about the Saint Patrick’s Day parade. It described the parade in honor of St. Patrick as “tens of thousands of people marching in the name of their Saint, who then get drunk and slosh all night, staggering, weaving, vomiting and urinating in public.” The note then complained about the banning of Irish gays and lesbians from the parade.

March 12
Pembroke Pines, FL
 – Arsonists tried to torch St. Edward’s Church. They broke into the church and did approximately $10,000 worth of damage before setting off the fire alarm.

March 27
New York, NY
 – A Catholic League member received a pamphlet from the Church of Cane Creek, Pleasantville, TN, that included a cartoon drawing of a nun and priest at the scourging of Christ as among the “religious in the crowd [who] spit into the blood that streamed down his face.”

March 28
Hemet, CA
 – As reported in the Hemet News, two statues were vandalized at St. Joseph’s Mission on the Sobada Indian Reservation. The two outdoor statues, one of Our Lady and one of St. Joseph, were beheaded. The heads were then stolen.

April
New York, NY
 – In response to the publication of an advertisement by the Catholic League in the April 16 edition of the New York Times defending Pope Pius XII, the Catholic League received the following hate mail (appearing just as it was submitted):

“The Nazis used 1500 years of Catholic and Protestant hatred, pogroms, Inquisitions, burnings, blood libels, to incite the smouldering hatred which culminated in the Holocaust…I as an American do not hate Catholics…But as for the church as an institution, I rank them up there with the worst purpurtrators of racial hatred and intolerance. Please save the ads to the Times trying to clean up the record of Pius when the other Popes throughout European history had as much blood on their hands as he did.”

“It took me a lifetime to figure out that Catholics are good, their moral teachings are good, but that the hierarchy is evil. Many of your popes and cardinals died with the blood of innocent people on their hands. It is an evil empire….Someday you will have to answer to your God for suppressing the evidence to further the cause of a worldly, wealthy, powerful organization that has no real ties to its people. An organization of powerful, geriatric men who answer to no one for anything they do.”

“An op-ed page…from the noted papist, William A. Donohue. Ad was riddled with lies distortions and misinformation. For your information, Pius XII was Hitler’s silent partner. He was in league with the Nazi’s and his actions are a shameful disgrace, but should not be surprising considering the treatment of the Jews and other religions by the Vatican over the centuries. But, rest assured that Pius XII is frying in hell, as will John Paul II when he joins him in the near future. We won’t get into the issue of Catholic priests molesting boys and apparently now raping nuns.”

“Your group’s love of human rights came only after your wings were clipped and claws removed. Now, with your temporal powers and responsibilities removed, you can engage in your high moral mindedness and lay your guilt trips on everyone.”

April 6
Lancaster, PA
 – An advertisement in the Lancaster News from the Evangelical Baptist Mission of Louisburg, N.C. attacked Catholic practices and beliefs concerning infant baptism. The advertisement called Catholic practices “an example of the PERVERSION that religious leaders make of the Scriptures.”

April 7
Sand Lake, NY
 – An ornate tabernacle containing the Holy Eucharist was stolen from St. Henry’s Church shortly before Palm Sunday. The tabernacle was valued at $10,000.

April 11
Taylor, MI 
– A plastic bomb exploded in a fourth-grade classroom at St. Paschel Elementary School. Two students suffered minor injuries. The bomb, which a student brought into the classroom, was one of two found in the school’s parking lot.

April 14
Bland County, VA
 – On Good Friday, a 4-foot, 400-pound concrete statue of Jesus was stolen from a private yard. The county sheriff, Melvin Cox, believed the theft was done “as a practical joke and it’s probably laying in a ditch somewhere.”

April 18
La Crescenta, CA
 – A life-sized crucifix at the altar of Saint James the Less Church was vandalized during Holy Week. In a break-in at the church, the statue of Jesus was stolen from the crucifix.

April 25
San Bernardino, CA
 – A teen was found guilty of stabbing her daughter to death moments after the infant’s birth. In a story in the San Bernardino Press-Enterprise, the teen’s attorney had argued for a lesser charge, saying the girl’s age “plus a strict Catholic upbringing” contributed as mitigating factors to the crime.

April
Canjilon, NM
 – Two juveniles were charged with causing more than $5,000 in damage to San Juan Nepomucene Church. A coalition of piano dealers established a fund to provide one-time grants of up to $500 to houses of worship damaged or defaced by hate crimes.

May
Fillmore, NY
 – A group called Most Holy Family Monastery released a booklet called “A Voice Crying in the Wilderness.” The text refers to Pope John Paul II as “Antipope” and claims he preaches the “gospel of the antichrist.”

June 5
Montgomery County, MD
 – Robert Lucas was found guilty of second-degree murder in the death of Monsignor Thomas Wells. During the trial, the defense tried to assert that Lucas killed Monsignor Wells in a maelstrom of rage and humiliation after the priest assaulted him sexually. In closing arguments, Montgomery County State’s Attorney Douglas F. Gasler said, “The defense played on the most rank stereotype, promoting the anti-Catholic, anti-clerical notion that all priests are homosexual predators. Never mind the fact that there was not one scintilla of credible proof offered to support such a theory.”

June 7
San Rafael, CA
 – Opening for the musical act “The Righteous Brothers” was comedian Brian Copeland at the Marin Center. On the topic of Catholicism, he ridiculed the missalettes at Mass, saying “they” didn’t want people reading the Bible for themselves. Copeland asserted Catholicism is a cafeteria-style religion where you pick and choose what you want to believe, and “forget all that birth control stuff.”

June 8
Ronkonkoma, NY
 – Two 14-year-old boys were charged with a hate crime for allegedly vandalizing a Catholic Church in their neighborhood. On May 10, they scribbled anti-religious slogans on a trailer on the grounds of St. Joseph’s Church, according to police. On May 16 they allegedly returned, throwing candleholders from the church into the woods. They also damaged the church sprinkler system and yelled “Satan Rules” at a church worker, according to police.

June 19
The Catholic League received the following message on the feedback section of its website (it appears exactly as written): “I think your objection to the [Lipton] onion dip is totally ridiculous! Your belief that the eucharist is really the body of Christ is even funnier. Just proves that you don’t believe that what Jesus did for us all on the cross was good enough once and for all. Of course the Catholic Church is more pagan than it is Christian-apostate to the core (I’ve seen pictures of the Poop kissing statues of the virgin mary). What a load of idol worship that is!! If you really care to find out what God really thinks of your religion, see Revelation 17!! For me, I’ll choose a relationship with the Creator of the Universe over your power-mongering manmade system any day.”

June 21
Boca Raton, FL
 – Writing in the Boca Raton/Delray Beach News, Mr. Richard Busemeyer demanded the sterilization of Catholic male clergy. He wrote, “It seems only fair this all male body of clergy, who are so very dedicated in their determination over the bodies of women, should show their dedication by requiring all priests, bishops and cardinals, etc., to become sterilized in keeping with their required vows of chastity. After all, with that vow of chastity, they have no need for sexual capability and would also be less likely to molest small boys.”

July 18
San Diego, CA
 – St. Charles Catholic Church in Egger Highlands was the object of both arson and vandalism. Witnesses said four people in ski masks drove away from the scene after splashing flammable liquid on the side of the Church. A statue of the Virgin Mary was also damaged. Total damage was estimated at $10,000.

July 19
Fort Reading, NJ
 – Cornerstone Publishing of Rice, WA bulk mailed the booklet titled Earth’s Final Warning to Catholic households in the Fort Reading area. The booklet made the usual “Earth’s Final Warning” claims: that the Catholic Church was the “Whore of Babylon” and part of a conspiracy to take over the world.

July 20
Temperance, MI
 – Vandals inflicted thousands of dollars in damage to the cemetery at Our Lady of Mount Carmel Catholic Church. Individual grave sites and religious artwork owned by the parish were vandalized. Damage included a large tombstone, worth about $8,000, that was broken in half; two missing Stations of the Cross valued at $10,000; and a $5,000 fiberglass statue of Jesus.

July 24
Philadelphia, PA 
– Aldo J. Muniz was sentenced to 21 months in prison for threatening to kill Anthony Cardinal Bevilacqua and members of a Roman Catholic social services agency. Muniz pleaded guilty to charges of making telephone threats to kill workers at the social agency Casa del Carmen, to blow up St. Henry’s Church in Philadelphia and to kill the city’s archbishop.

July 25
Canton, MI
 – Jamal Saba erected a 5-foot statue of the Virgin Mary on the front lawn of his new $500,000 house. The statue was part of a $10,000 landscaping job that included a trellis. A neighbor, David Brooks, complained to the homeowners’ association about the religious nature of the statue. Subsequently, the head of the association’s architectural committee claimed the statue was too big and did not have the committee’s approval. Press reports indicated many of the residents in the association had fixtures of one type or another on their lawns—fountains, ceramic animals, etc.—and none had the approval of the homeowners’ association. Mr. Saba took his case to court.

July 25
Duluth, MN
 – Mr. William Lamppa, in a letter to the editor in the Duluth News Tribune, used the debate over stem cell research to launch into a diatribe against the Catholic Church. Among his accusations were: “…from the 4th through the 20th centuries, the Church of Rome shed more blood than any other institution…[the Church] jailed, tortured and burned at the stake an estimated 20 million innocent men, women and children.” He then returned to the stem cell debate by saying, “[stem cell research] pales in resemblance to what the Church of Rome did in the past to living human beings on such a monumental scale.”

July 27
Brandywine Hundred, DE
 – Fire destroyed a church rectory and seriously injured the pastor. The state fire marshal said the blaze was deliberately set. Church pastor Father James T. Kirk was asleep in the rectory when the blaze was set at about 3 am. He escaped the flames by crawling through a door that led to a courtyard. The fire caused $125,000 in damage.

July 30
Columbia, SC
 – Midnight Call Ministries sent out a mailing offering a new book called When Catholics Die, Eternal Life or Eternal Damnation? by Richard Noll. The accompanying letter said the book does not “condemn, bash or speak in a careless manner about the Catholic Church….[But rather] through the distribution of this book, God will deliver souls from the bondage of man-centered theology.”

August 11
Lancaster, SC
 – An inter-denominational quilting group was working at their craft at St. Catherine’s Catholic Church when they decided to order pizza. The pizza was delivered along with comic book-like tracts with titles such as, “Are Roman Catholics Christians?” Others linked the Church to pagan rituals and said Satan created the Catholic Mass. Laura Laleugher, who is Catholic, took the pizza back to Fox’s Pizza Den. She received an apology and a refund from the owners.
Jesse Gay, the employee who included the booklets with the pizza, said he meant no harm and that handing out the anti-Catholic tracts was his personal mission. His employers forbade Gay from passing out any more pamphlets.

August 14
Virginia Beach, VA
 – A statue of the Virgin Mary was vandalized outside Star of the Sea Church. It was knocked over and the head was severed—it was found a foot away. The statue, valued at $6,000, weighed 500 pounds and would have required two people and a moving dolly to move it. Parish manager Jean Choplinsky said, “Whoever did this had to be really angry, with a lot of adrenaline running.”

September 11
Within hours of the terrorist attack on New York City and the Pentagon, an anonymous writer to the Catholic League’s website left this feedback (appearing just as it was submitted):
“People like you and your fat priests, bishops and popes are as responsible as the terrorists who bombed the WTC. You and your bull—- god has done nothing for the human race except create, hatred, polarization, pain, suffering guilt and the right to kill other human beings for your stupid fanasty called jesus and mary. Who the f— cares about god except for all you a——- who make a living making other people miserable. I’m sure the pope and all the great cardinals will feel oh so bad. Ttotal b——-. What don’t you put your energy into things that support life instead of your bull—- after life crap. ALL REGIGION SHOULD BE OUTLAWED FOR THE GOOD AND FUTURE OF MANKIND.”

September 12
Charlottesville, WV – A booklet called Born Free! Liberty; how long? was distributed outside a Sam’s Club/Wal-Mart store. The booklet is a diatribe against the Catholic Church including, “A religion of externals is attractive to the unrenewed heart. The pomp of the catholic [sic] worship has a seductive, bewitching power, by which many are deceived: and they come to look upon the Roman Church as the very gate of heaven.” When a customer complained, officials at the stores asked the people handing out the booklet to stop.

September 17
The following message was written in the feedback section of the Catholic League website (appearing just as it was submitted):
“Stop spreading your propaganda. You are no better than the Nazis. Must I remind you of the church’s platform of ‘Non envolvement’ in the holocaust. You idiots were probably happy to see your biggest competitor (the jews) reduced in numbers. Children can be raised with good morals without filling their heads with lies. I am a perfectly moral citizen, raised without the influence of your archaic institution. In this day and age science has the potential to explain the complexities of the Universe properly. The Holy bible is a half-a—- attempt to explain existence. THE EASY ANSWER to put it bluntly. You people make me sick. P.S. Since God doesn’t exist, that would make Jesus either a liar or a raving lunatic. Son of god my a–!! Also that would make Mary ‘the village whore’ not a virgin. I bet she cooked up that story to keep Joseph from beating her a—when he discovered how loose she really was.”

October 1
Haverill, MA 
– Vandals smashed statues at Sacred Heart and St. James parishes. Police treated the incidents as hate crimes. A statue of Jesus on the front lawn at Sacred Heart Parish was found with its hands knocked off and face smashed. At St. James Parish the head of a St. Patrick statue was knocked off its body. Damaged was estimated at more than $10,000.
A day later, a 39-year-old man was arrested and charged with the crime. Police say he had a history of mental problems.

October 27
Idaho Springs, CO
 – Vandals broke windows and painted swastikas and other obscenities on the walls of the Church of St. John. The church, located off popular biking and hiking trails, lets hitchhikers and backpackers spend the night in sleeping bags in the pews. Church officials said the open door policy will continue.

November 
The Catholic League launched an advertising campaign aimed at adding new members to the organization. The television ad appeared on the cable news and debate shows “Hardball with Chris Matthews” on MSNBC, and “The O’Reilly Factor” and “Hannity and Colmes” on the FOX News Channel. The 1-800 number service the league retained reported that its operators (who field calls for many different organizations) had never heard such obscene hate calls as the ones they took from those who objected to the league ad. The league received obscene hate calls in its New York office as well.

November
Fresno, CA
 – A book called National Sunday Law: A Shocking Glimpse Behind the Scenes by A. Jan Marcussen was mass mailed in the Fresno area. The book is filled with anti-Catholic rhetoric including allegations that the pope is the anti-Christ, is responsible for the deaths of millions of Christians and is part of a conspiracy to take over the world.

November
Storm Lake, LA 
– The pamphlet titled Earth’s Final Warning was mass mailed in the Storm Lake area by Cornerstone Publishing. Among other things, it alleges the Catholic Church is the “Whore of Babylon” and that the papacy is involved in a conspiracy with the United States to establish a “new world order.”

November
New York, NY
 – Leslie Wright, the team coordinator of the New York group that represents the World Association of Girl Guides and Girl Scouts (WAGGGS) at the United Nations, helped the notoriously anti-Catholic group Catholics for a Free Choice (CFFC) recruit new workers. Wright passed along job descriptions and openings to a list of e-mail addresses while working for WAGGgS; Girl Scouts USA is a member of WAGGGS. Girl Scouts officials defended Ms. Wright saying she was merely passing along an e-mail message concerning the opening at CFFC. The two said the Girl Scouts were “an inclusive group.” When asked by the Catholic League whether they were aware that CFFC is an expressly anti-Catholic group, they said they “were not religion experts.”

November 4
Barrington, RI
 – The annual Blithewold Mansion, Gardens and Arboretum fund-raiser featured a costume contest. The Alan Nathan family of Barrington came dressed as a friar, a nun, the devil and a pregnant nun. The event was featured prominently in the Providence Sunday Journal “Society” section.

November 24
West Valley City, UT
 – A spate of vandalism and burglaries at area churches and other holy sites included two Catholic churches, St. Peter’s and St. Paul’s Catholic churches in West Valley City. Vandals made off with $400 after they shattered windows, broke locks and candles and scattered vestments about the sacristy. A Book of the Gospels kept near the altar was singed by flames.

December
Bloomington, WI 
– St. Mary’s Catholic school was the target of four break-ins over a short period of time. Each time a computer was used to view adult websites. Police believe a group of boys aged 14 to 17 were responsible.

December
Los Angeles, CA
 – Police arrested a 35-year-old man charging him with a string of vandalism against several Catholic churches in Los Angeles. Police said Emad Ibrahim Saad, a member of the King Fahd mosque, acted alone. The vandalism included attacks on statues of the Virgin Mary. Fahd allegedly left Islamic literature at the churches including flyers that read, “Allah is the only one true God.”

December
New York, NY
 – Complaints came in to New York gossip columnist Liz Smith regarding the “Christmas Spectacular” at Radio City Music Hall. The complaints were regarding the religious nature of a nativity scene at the end of the show.

December
Plano, TX
 – The publication Proclaiming the Gospel by evangelist Mike Gendron is filled with slurs against the Catholic Church. Among the charges: “Roman Catholicism has also offered spiritual inducements to those who put Christians to death. There are one billion Roman Catholics who have been blinded by Satan. Many are on the wide road that leads to destruction and are unaware of the horrors that await them.”




Executive Summary

Some of the highlights of 2000 are recounted here, drawn from the various thematic sections that make up this report.

The year 2000 saw a presidential election. The Catholic League is not a political organization, nor does it align itself with any political party or agenda. However, the Catholic League speaks out when the political process or government agencies, whatever their affiliation, interfere with the rights of Catholics or the Catholic Church. It can be over a simple matter, such as in Shirley, MA where inmates in a state prison had their rosary beads confiscated. Or it could be on the national scene, where a Catholic priest was denied the position as House chaplain.

The House chaplain issue actually began in 1999 and was not resolved until March 2000 with the selection of Father Daniel Coughlin, vicar for priests of the Archdiocese of Chicago. An 18-member House committee (nine Republicans and nine Democrats) presented three finalists for the chaplain vacancy to the House leadership, with the top choice being Father Timothy O’Brien, a Marquette University professor.

During the selection process, Father O’Brien was subject to outrageous questions that showed signs of lingering anti-Catholic prejudices at work. He was asked whether his Roman collar might be a divisive obstacle in ministering to congressional representatives, though his Protestant predecessor had worn a collar for decades. He was also questioned whether a celibate priest could minister to families, though priests have been doing such counseling for centuries.

House leadership then named Reverend Charles Wright, a Presbyterian minister, to the position. When it was acknowledged by Republican House leadership that members would be more comfortable with a Protestant minister, the Catholic League protested, wondering when a “Catholic priests need not apply” sign was posted for the House chaplain position. The Catholic League asked for an examination of the selection process to determine if anti-Catholicism had been a determining factor. As New York Times columnist William Safire put it, “All hell — perhaps all Hell — has broken loose.”

When a report was issued in January on the selection process, the Catholic League was not satisfied. House leadership attempted to strong-arm the Catholic League into folding on the issue, but our public response was to tell them to “take a hike.” In late January, the House vote on the chaplain position was postponed. When it was reported that the Rev. Billy Graham had called House Speaker Dennis Hastert’s office asking him not to abandon Rev. Wright, Graham issued a statement—sent to the Catholic League—that Speaker Hastert had called him, and that he “did not and could not take sides on this issue.”

Writing in the Newark Star Ledger, Paul Mulshine said that Hastert and House Majority Leader Dick Armey “are engaging in a shouting match” with Catholic League president William Donohue over the issue. “Sometimes league officials get carried away,” Mulshine wrote, “but that’s all the more reason that no politician in his right mind would get them started.” On March 23rd, in an extraordinary move, Hastert announced on the House floor that Rev. Wright had withdrawn at Hastert’s request, and introduced Father Coughlin as the new House chaplain.

In the midst of this controversy, then-Texas Governor George W. Bush launched his South Carolina primary bid with a speech at Bob Jones University. The Catholic League objected, noting that Bob Jones University was notoriously anti-Catholic and that its website identified the Catholic Church as “The Mother of Harlots.” The university also was noted for its racially discriminatory policies, including a ban on interracial dating. Governor Bush eventually wrote a letter of regret to Cardinal John O’Connor for not rejecting the university’s anti-Catholic policies outright, and sent a copy of the letter to the Catholic League. On February 28, 2000, Donohue was asked by Matt Lauer on the “Today” show whether Bush’s apology was sufficient. The Catholic League president said it was, and this put the issue to rest.

The Catholic League also took strong exception when U.S. Rep. Loretta Sanchez, vice chairman of the Democratic National Committee, scheduled a fund-raising event at the Playboy Mansion during the Democratic national convention in August. Bill Donohue wrote to Vice President Al Gore asking him to cancel the event. Scheduled for August 15th, the league noted the offensiveness of holding an event at such a venue on the Feast of the Assumption. The league also condemned the association with an organization that exploits women and has funded anti-Catholic organizations such as Catholics for a Free Choice. In addition, the leaders of Playboy Enterprises—Hugh and Christie Hefner—had made numerous derogatory comments about the Church and Catholic teaching.

When Gore’s response was unsatisfactory, the Catholic League issued a press release condemning the planned “Gorgy,” then held a press conference in front of Playboy Enterprises in New York. This was followed by an ad in the Washington, D.C. newspaper Roll Call outlining the Catholic League’s position and demanding that Vice President Gore cancel the event. After announcing a “web war” and enlisting assistance from supporters in the Protestant, Jewish, Muslim and Buddhist communities, the league wrote to Senator Joseph Lieberman asking his assistance. On August 11th, William Donohue appeared on “Hardball” on national television calling for Sanchez to be fired by Vice President Gore, or for the event to be moved. A few hours later, Sanchez announced that the fundraiser would be relocated.

As it does before each presidential election, a motley group of dissenting Catholics called Catholics Speak Out, with the financial support of non-Catholics, sought to define Church teachings in their own way in a full-page advertisement in the New York Times. The political advertisement claimed that Catholic views on abortion were not “monolithic.” The Catholic League responded in the same issue with an advertisement stating that just “as there are not diverse Catholic teachings on genocide or racial discrimination, there is no legitimate diversity in Catholic teaching on abortion.”

On July 11, the Washington D.C. Council passed a bill mandating health insurance coverage for contraceptives that did not allow for an exemption for Catholic institutions. It was not an oversight. During the debate on the bill, council member Jim Graham called the Catholic Church homophobic and warned his colleagues against “deferring to Rome.” The Catholic League called for the censure and resignation of Graham, as well as a reversal of the council’s measure as the state attempting to impose its will on religion. As Congress has oversight of council action, measures were immediately taken by Rep. Ernest Istook, who chaired the D.C. appropriations committee. He promised that the legislation would not be accepted without a “conscience clause” to exempt Catholic institutions.

Congressman James P. Moran of Virginia then decided to lash-out at Catholicism in support of Graham. Moran complained of the “hypocrisy of the Catholic Church as an institution towards homosexuality.” To compound the offense, an aide to Congressman Moran then deleted the attack from the Congressional Record. The congressman was told that he had violated ethics rules that prohibit such alterations.

Most of the Catholic League’s interventions in 2000 did not involve politics. In April, officials of New Jersey Transit cancelled the appearance of a Catholic entertainment group at the grand opening of a new light rail system “because of separation of Church and State.” A gospel group from a local Baptist church was allowed to perform. The Catholic League blasted the unequal treatment to the press, then called the governor’s office for an explanation. New Jersey Transit admitted they were mistaken and issued a full apology.

At Denver International Airport authorities banned the announcement of upcoming Catholic masses on Sundays and holy days at an interfaith chapel used by Christians, Jews and Muslims. One person had complained that the announcements on the public address system were a violation of separation of Church and State. The local American Civil Liberties Union chapter supported the ban, arguing that only Catholic services were announced. It was not mentioned that the other members of the interfaith chapel supported the Catholic announcements and chose not to use the public address system. The Catholic League protested and in December, the airport authorities announced a revised rule that allowed a public announcement of the existence of the chapel and a number to call for scheduled services. The Catholic League responded that was just a gag rule aimed specifically at Catholics under threats from the ACLU.

Press coverage of the Catholic Church is often slanted from the perspective of a cultural agenda. No better example of that appeared in 2000 than the Kansas City Star series on an alleged AIDS epidemic in the priesthood. Beginning in its January 30th edition, the Kansas City Star ran a series of articles claiming an AIDS epidemic in the priesthood caused by the Church’s teaching on homosexuality, the practice of celibacy and the failure of the Church to teach “safe sex” in seminaries. The series also claimed that the Church was attempting to hide the epidemic and, as a result, priests with the disease died alone and without support.

The series was based, in part, on a survey conducted of Catholic priests by the Star and investigation of death certificates of priests which claimed to show that the death rate among priests was four times the general population rate. The Catholic League responded with an examination of the Star’s survey of priests by Center for Media and Public Affairs. The Center found that the survey was based on only a 27 percent response rate, with no geographic or demographic balance sought in the responses. Additionally, the Star’s claim of a higher rate was in error as it compared the death rate to the general population, rather than to adult males. Adjusted accordingly, there was no discernable difference. Finally, the investigation into death rates was flawed as it made national claims based on regional investigation. The Catholic League charged that the survey and series smacked of an agenda, rather than a serious investigation. Few newspapers gave much credence to the series, and a follow-up that intended to “prove” the allegations collapsed from the same faulty research and evident journalistic prejudice.

An ongoing difficulty in the press throughout 2000 was the appearance of advertisements in various newspapers from the Eternal Gospel Church, a breakaway Seventh-Day Adventist sect, or from a similar breakaway group, the Sweetwater Seventh-Day Adventist Church. The anti-Catholic advertisement—under the headline “Earth’s Final Warning”—calls the Catholic faith false, says its leadership is corrupting Catholics, and equates the Church with the biblical Whore of Babylon. Whenever the ad appeared in a newspaper, the Catholic League immediately asked the publisher to refrain from accepting adds filled with such hate speech in the future, just as ads would be rejected from neo-Nazis or the KKK. In 2000, publications such as the Columbian in Washington State, the Baltimore Sun, the Huntsville Times, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, the Arizona Republic, the Athens Messenger and The Sun in San Bernardino, CA agreed that running the advertisement was a mistake and many chose to run an apology to readers.

The Oregonian of Portland, Oregon, refused to promise not to run the advertisement, singing a song about freedom of speech. The Fresno Bee made a similar cliched response, but did publish an op-ed piece from the Catholic League which stated that “this is not an issue of ‘free speech’ in any sense of its meaning in journalism. This was a commercial transaction between the Fresno Bee and the Eternal Gospel Church. It was a paid advertisement, not a news story, opinion piece or editorial. The Fresno Bee decided to accept money for an advertisement that dealt squarely and entirely in religious bigotry and published it within its pages.”

A different battle with a newspaper took place after the Spokesman-Review of Spokane, Washington, ran a short news item in its November 8th edition headlined, “Nazi priest promotes his book.” The story was simply a brief news item announcing a talk and a book signing by Father Robert Spitzer, president of Gonzaga University in Spokane. When contacted by Bill Donohue, the paper explained that the headline was an “error” and that an apology would appear the next day. Donohue responded that it was not an error. He charged someone at the paper had deliberately defamed Father Spitzer because he had banned Planned Parenthood from speaking at the university campus the previous spring.

The Catholic League then contacted all the major newspapers across the country and the TV and radio stations in the Spokane area. Within 24 hours, intern Robin Moody was asked to resign by the newspaper’s editors for writing the headline. Though Donohue didn’t know it when he predicted the connection between the story and Father Spitzer’s previous action, Moody had been the president of the women’s studies club at Gonzaga who had sought to bring a Planned Parenthood spokesman to the campus.

Attacks on Pope Pius XII, claiming that he was a virtual collaborator in the Holocaust, continued throughout 2000 and the Catholic League vociferously defended his legacy. These attacks are most often based on an anti-Catholic agenda and have nothing to do with historical truth. One of the most vicious and biased attacks took place on a March 19th edition of CBS’ “60 Minutes.” Relying almost solely on John Cornwell’s notorious book, Hitler’s Pope, correspondent Ed Bradley allowed Cornwell to be unchallenged in his attacks on Pius. This, despite reviews such as that by Newsweek’s Kenneth Woodward which described Hitler’s Pope as “a classic example of what happens when an ill-equipped journalist assumes the air of sober scholarship…Errors of fact and ignorance of context appear on almost every page.” That critique, along with others, was published by the Catholic League in an advertisement less than two weeks later in the New York Times condemning “the revisionist history of ’60 Minutes.'”

The Catholic League would go after “60 Minutes” again later in the year when it interviewed Catholics For a Free Choice head Frances Kissling for a story on Catholic hospitals merging with secular institutions. The story’s agenda was the “threat” this posed to access to contraceptives and abortion. Kissling stated that, “Doctors are no longer gods. Now we have bishops who are gods.”

Donohue blasted “60 Minutes” for seeking out Kissling as an “expert,” considering her years of anti-Catholic activity and the fact that the U.S. bishops had twice denounced CFFC for fraudulently posing as a Catholic group. A few months earlier, the Catholic League also exposed CFFC’s anti-Catholic background and activities to media around the country. And when Kissling released the results of a survey in October that purportedly showed 60 percent of Catholic voters supported legal abortion, Donohue dug into the survey and proved that the actual results showed that only 6 percent supported abortion law as it exists today.

Catholics for a Free Choice took a leadership role in attempting to downgrade the status of the Vatican at the United Nations in its “See Change” campaign. This was a blatant attempt to silence a voice that CFFC opposes and, on July 11, the Catholic League was delighted when the U.S. House of Representatives approved by 416-1 a resolution denouncing those efforts. The Catholic League had written to all House members in March asking for their support of the resolution.

The voucher campaign continued to bring out the anti-Catholics who would rather use bigotry than reasoned arguments to advance their position. In the student newspaper at Michigan State University on October 10th, a cartoon ran with a Christ-like figure nailed to a cross. Across the figure’s chest was written “Public Schools” and atop the cross was the inscription, “Proposal 1,” a ballot initiative for vouchers. President William McPherson of Michigan State told the Catholic League that he was outraged by the cartoon and issued a public statement condemning it.

The Detroit Free Press ran an anti-voucher editorial cartoon that referred to a “Vouch-O-Matic” that destroys the constitution and sucks millions out of public education. The last panel of the cartoon said, “To order, Rush Your Tax Dollars To: The Roman Catholic Church” care of the pro-voucher organization in Michigan. A patently dishonest anti-voucher television campaign aired in Michigan showed a disabled child in a wheelchair with the statement, “private schools are allowed to reject disabled students like Angelica.” In fact, Michigan law barred any such discrimination whether the school was public or private, while those in the forefront of the anti-voucher campaign lost in a 1993 bid to stop public funds from being spent on handicapped children in private schools. The Catholic League contacted virtually every TV outlet in the state and the ads were pulled from many stations.

Popular culture continued to dip into anti-Catholic polemics to get a headline. Singer, actress, and infomercial huckster Cher released a new CD called “Not Commercial” in November. One song on the CD was called “Sisters of Mercy.” Allegedly written based on tales told to Cher by her mother, the song called the Sisters of Mercy “daughters of hell,” “masters of pain” and “mothers of shame.” The Catholic League accused her of taking a cheap shot that costs nothing in Hollywood, and Pat Scully went on the NBC show “Extra” to denounce the song. Cher had almost nothing to say in response.

Marilyn Manson’s new CD “Holy Wood” was replete with anti-Catholic imagery and violence. Among his songs were “Godeatgod” and “Cruci-fixion in Space.” The Catholic League denounced the alleged musician as a bigot who appeared in a video dressed as a bishop and performs wearing a bishop’s miter. On his website, Manson responded by saying, “I can’t possibly be at war with Christ, because your religion killed him and what he stood for.” Ann Powers of the New York Times reviewed a Manson concert and noted, without disapproval, his anti-Catholic taunts.

There were certain books that raised concerns in 2000. They are not included in the Annual Report because they were not specifically meant to be anti-Catholic. But they were often used by bigots to weigh-in against the Church. A book such as Garry Wills’ Papal Sin, released in June, may not have been intended as a screed. Yet, Wills charged that the Catholic Church exists in a system of lies, falsifications, and misrepresentations meant to prop up papal authority and are part of a fabricated “structure of deceit.” While Wills may have intended his book to be meant for Church reform from his particular perspective, his vindictive language aimed at the papacy was used as a source by those out to attack the Church, particularly in the press. Another such work, though the author’s intent seemed far more insidious, was The Silence of Sodom, Homosexuality in Modern Catholicism. Released in July by University of Chicago Press, it was written by Mark D. Jordan, a former Catholic seminary instructor who teaches religion at Emory University. A self-described “openly gay man,” Jordan drafted his book while on a paid fellowship from the John S. Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. In the book he claims to find in Catholicism in general, and the priesthood in particular, a dominant “homoerotic” culture. It is central to liturgy, the sacraments, and the priesthood itself. Church teachings that condemn homosexual practices are “efforts to keep the dreaded ‘secret’ from being spoken.”

The business world still panders to anti-Catholicism. Insight Media offered a catalogue of videos and CD-ROMS for high school and college students. Everything from Animism to voodoo was treated with fairness in its religion section. Under Roman Catholicism, there were two listings: one on the Inquisition, the other on the Church’s “origins and growth into a political force in world events.” Both are negative portrayals of Catholicism. Catholic League members protested and the head of the company announced that his staff would more carefully screen new videos on Catholicism.

Bear Basics, a store in Berkeley, California offered T-shirts for sale that said “F— Christmas,” though the shirt spelled out the actual obscenity. When the Catholic League inquired, it was informed that there were no similar T-shirts in regard to Hanukkah. Of course, the forced secularization of Christmas was evident in numerous commercial businesses and Internet shopping guides. While Hanukkah remained properly represented in its religious context, Christmas was consistently reduced to its secular symbols, if not eliminated completely. At 1-800-FLOWERS.com there were no religious items for Christmas, but a Star of David charm necklace for Hanukkah was featured. The Christmas selection for FTD.com had all secular items but sold Star Shaped Hanukkah cookies while Hallmark’s “Holiday Gifts” selection had no religious items for Christmas. Altavista.com explained the secular meaning of Christmas but offered a religious interpretation of Hanukkah. Yahoo.com listed six religions under “Religious Holidays,” but only one of them is presented with an “Opposing Views” category—Christmas.

The Internet has also become a vast supplier of anti-Catholicism in digital form to make certain that bigotry moves into the 21st Century. The Internet search engine Excite offers web users the service of typing in words when doing an Internet search. When the words “Mother Teresa” were typed and searched, among the matches listed was a profane title for a pornographic website. Excite corrected the offense after being contacted by the Catholic League.

Slate magazine’s Jack Shafer wrote a piece in response to a column in the New York Times Magazine about anti-Catholicism. Shafer argued that, “If anti-Catholic bigotry exists in America, it might have something to do with the Catholic Church’s past conduct. Just this weekend, His Holiness John Paul II conceded as much when he finally got around to apologizing to the world for 2000 years of Catholic wickedness.” Shafer also compared the pope to Louis Farrakhan: “But tap-dancing away from accountability more beautifully than Farrakhan, the pope absolved the Catholic Church of blame because it is ‘holy and immaculate.'” In December, Salon. posted an article allegedly written by a 15-year-old girl charging that her school is anti-gay. The piece, “Teens, Sex and God” accused the Catholic Church of hating gays and contributing to “intolerant attitudes” that “contribute greatly to teen depression and suicide.”

A sad development is the continued vandalism against Catholic churches. The Catholic League reported acts of vandalism and desecrations in Maryland, Alabama, Alaska and New Jersey. Media in the United States were virtually mute when a church desecration took place in Montreal in March. A group of radical feminists invaded Mary Queen of the World Cathedral. They painted “No God, no masters” on one of the altars, overturned flowerpots, and stuck sanitary napkins—some soiled—to pictures and walls. The New York Times report from Montreal the day after focused on a Quebec controversy over whether Pokemon cards should be issued in French.

A series of attacks on Catholic statues took place in Brooklyn, NY. Primus St. Croix, an illegal immigrant, confessed to the vandalism and was sentenced to five years probation. At the same time, a man who had smeared paint on a dung-laden portrait of the Virgin Mary surrounded by pornographic pictures was sentenced to a year in jail and ordered to pay a $1,000 fine. The Catholic League requested that New York Senator Charles Schumer ask the U.S. Justice Department to investigate if St. Croix could be prosecuted under federal law that makes it unlawful for anyone “who intentionally damages or destroys the property of a place of religious worship.”

There are other means to attack the place of religion in American society and activist organizations were busy this year going after the expression of religious belief. As usual, the American Civil Liberties Union led the way with a host of silly lawsuits. Postings of the 10 Commandments seemed to attract most of the organization’s ire this year with suits filed in Nebraska, Kentucky, Indiana, and one deferred to Americans United for Separation of Church and State in Pittsburgh. Local ACLU chapters protested the erection of prison chapels at private expense in Louisiana, and the National Park Service folded to the ACLU over a memorial to World War I soldiers in California’s Mojave Desert that was in the shape of a cross. The ACLU is appealing a district court’s decision in Virginia that allowed a moment of silence in public schools. The ACLU protested because the “moment of silence” allowed the option of silent prayer.

The year ended with the usual burst of activity surrounding Christmas, with various activist organizations going berserk over any mention of the religious nature of the season. At the beginning of December, the Anti-Defamation League issued a pamphlet called, “The December Dilemma: Guidelines for Public Schools During the December Holidays.” The guidelines would virtually ban the use of the term “Christmas,” let alone religious symbols and explanations of the season. The Catholic League posted on its website a parody of the ADL guidelines called “The December Celebration” which outlined the many ways to legitimately and permissibly acknowledge the religious significance of Christmas within public schools.

The usual illegal attempts to ban from public property Nativity scenes that were paid for privately took place, with activist organizations relying on threats and intimidation. In Eugene, OR, the city manager banned the display of Christmas trees on public property in the name of “practicing diversity.” The level of absurdity reached the sublime in Vancouver, WA when bus drivers were ordered not to wear seasonal hats, neckties or vests that displayed “religious symbols” of the season. The transit authorities attempted to explain their position by citing the state Constitution. But the Catholic League noted that transit officials throughout the state had no such ban, though they obviously followed the same Constitution.

As the following Annual Report clearly shows, the unfortunate truth in America is that anti-Catholicism and Catholic bashing are alive and well. Only those who are hopelessly bigoted against Catholicism could maintain that this problem has disappeared. The goal of the Catholic League, the nation’s largest Catholic civil rights organization, remains the same. It will continue to defend individual Catholics and the institutional Church from defamation and discrimination.

Robert P. Lockwood
Director of Research




Activists Organizations

March 10
Pro-abortion groups from around the country celebrated a “National Day of Appreciation for Abortion Providers.” The event was organized by a group called “Refuse and Resist!” On the group’s website, it described a “Christian fascist, fundamentalist morality” that has taken over the country. Joining the group was Catholics for a Free Choice, an anti-Catholic front group sponsored in large part by the Ford Foundation.

April 4
Kanawha County, WV
 — Science teachers in the Kanawha County school system unanimously approved recommending the purchase of Of Pandas and People, a science book that espouses an “intelligent design” theory on the origins of the universe. Though the American Civil Liberties Union has often stated as policy that the answer to alleged bad speech is more speech, the West Virginia chapter of the ACLU stepped in and advocated that the book be banned. School officials saying, “it wasn’t a book based on scientific reason and analysis” subsequently rejected the book.

April 23
San Francisco, CA
 — The Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence, a group of homosexuals dressed as nuns, once again scheduled events on Good Friday and Easter Sunday in downtown San Francisco. Good Friday saw a fetish fashion show, “Hot Cross Buns” that provided “a chance to get spanked.” On Easter Sunday, events concluded with the annual Easter Bonnet and “Hunky Jesus” contest. The “Sisters” receive tax-exempt status for their anti-Catholic activities, as well as full support from local government officials.

May 8
New York, NY 
— One hour before the funeral Mass for Cardinal John O’Connor, CNN interviewed Ann Northrop of the gay group ACT-UP and Kelli Conlin, a pro-abortion activist. Northrop stated, “He [O’Connor] was a bigot and he was very aggressive about promoting his bigotry.” Conlin stated that Cardinal O’Connor was unwilling to “open his mind and hearts” to alleged Catholics who were pro-abortion. The credibility of neither women was challenged by the reporter. Northrop was one of the ACT-UP members who broke into St. Patrick’s Cathedral in 1989 to disrupt Mass and desecrate the Eucharist. Conlin is a radical pro-abortionist with a long record of anti-Church statements.

May
The website for Women Leaders referred to the Vatican as a “dictatorship.” The group was among those joining in the “See Change” effort to downgrade the Vatican’s status at the United Nations. The group’s advisory board, which included New York Democratic Reps. Nita Lowey, Louise Slaughter and Carolyn Maloney, as well as former New York Rep. Geraldine Ferraro, was abolished when the “See Change” effort drew controversy.

July 1
Virginia
 — The Virginia chapter of the ACLU sued the state over a new law requiring a moment of silence during which students would be allowed to “meditate, pray or engage in other silent activity.” The Virginia ACLU claimed the moment of silence was a violation of the separation of church and state. Executive director Kent Willis said the law would be constitutional if prayer was not mentioned. In September, the ACLU went into district court arguing that the schools were endorsing prayer by listing it as an option for students. The district court allowed the moment of silence to proceed. The ACLU is appealing that decision.

August
Colorado 
— When the Colorado Board of Education urged schools to post the words, “In God We Trust,” the ACLU announced it would sue if any schools actually posted the motto that has been on U.S. currency since the 19th century.

August
New Orleans, LA
 — The Louisiana chapter of the ACLU claimed the new license plates in New Orleans “entangles the state with religion.” The new plates read, “Choose Life.”

August
Chicago, IL
 — Over the summer, a religious group called Total Living Network decided to distribute more than 100,000 religious book covers to students in Chicago when they returned to class. The group People for the American Way warned school officials not to endorse the practice. The Norman Lear-founded organization complained that an inscription on the book covers listed the Ten Commandments.

September
New Orleans, LA
 — In reaction to a summer-long drought, Louisiana Governor Mike Foster issued a proclamation asking citizens to pray for rain. The local ACLU affiliate protested against “public officials who want to promote their personal beliefs from an elected perch and turn our country into a biblical theocracy not unlike that of a country called Iran.”

October/November
Michigan
 — Television advertisements run by “All Kids First,” a Michigan anti-voucher activist organization, showed a child in a wheelchair and stated that “private schools are allowed to reject disabled students.” The advertising was in error as Michigan law bars discrimination against persons with disabilities whether the school is private or public. After the Catholic League contacted virtually every television outlet in the state, the untruthful ads were pulled from many stations.

October 3
People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) launched an advertising campaign using a reproduction of the Shroud of Turin, which many Catholics believe to be the burial cloth of Christ. The Shroud was reproduced with the words, “Make a Lasting Impression – Go Vegetarian.” The Catholic League protested the appropriation of Catholic symbols in service to a secular crusade.

October 14
Centereach, NY — Mr. Glenn Spencer of the California-based anti-immigration group Voices of Citizens Together spoke to 200 people at the local VFW. Spencer said the rising number of Mexican immigrants is part of a plan by Mexico to “re-conquer” the southwest United States. He said those taking part in the plan included the Mexican government, the hierarchy of the Catholic Church, the Ford Foundation, Citibank and immigrants rights groups.

October 23
New York, NY
 — Catholics Speak Out — a fringe group of dissenting Catholics with support from non-Catholic donors—published a full-page ad in the New York Times claiming that there is no “monolithic” Catholic teaching on abortion. The Catholic League had its own ad in the Times in response, noting that just “as there are no diverse Catholic teachings on genocide or racial discrimination, there is no legitimate diversity in Catholic teaching on abortion.”

October 24
Washington, D.C.
 — Catholics for a Free Choice (CFFC) released the results of a survey of Catholic voters in which Frances Kissling, CFFC president, claimed that 66 percent of Catholics support legalized abortion and 70 percent believe the Catholic bishops should not use the political arena to advance their agenda. Responding, William Donohue pointed out that in studying the results, the survey actually showed that only 6 percent of Catholics agreed with abortion law as it is accepted today and 61 percent say that abortion should never be acceptable or only in rare circumstances. Most media subsequently ignored the survey.

November 12-14
Washington, DC
 — Soulforce, a radical Christian group that seeks to change Christian teaching on homosexuality and other issues, disrupted Mass, interrupted a meeting of the bishops, then blocked the entrance to the Shrine of the Immaculate Conception during the annual gathering of the National Conference of Catholic Bishops. Joined by Dignity, a group that rejects Church teaching on homosexuality, Soulforce claimed that Church teaching “about sexual minorities lead to suffering and death.”

The Catholic League responded by drawing attention to Leather Fest 2000 in New York. Held at the Lesbian and Gay Community Services Center, it celebrated “20 years of pain and pleasure” by holding workshops on “rope bondage, mummification, fisting, flogging, and others.” The Catholic League noted that “this is what kills gays, not talk on abstinence.”

The Catholic League also said that “to disrupt religious services in a house of worship is the kind of thing that Nazis made famous” and concluded that, the protestors “need our prayers, but they also need to spend some time in jail.”

November 29
Baton Rouge, LA
 — The American Civil Liberties Union threatened to bring legal action against Louisiana Governor Mike Foster over the building of three new prison chapels. The chapels were to be built with private funds. Foster and his wife are co-chairs of the Louisiana Chapel Foundation which is overseeing the construction. ACLU attorney Joe Cook said, “It raises some issues of separation of church and state and favoring one religion. Some of the wardens have made it clear they have a preference for one religion over another—Christianity.”

November 29
Broken Bow, NE
 — The Nebraska chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union asked the city of Broken Bow to remove a nativity scene from the City Square. ACLU attorney Amy Miller of Lincoln asked Mayor Vaughn Lyne to remove the nativity scene, saying she received a complaint from a Broken Bow resident.

December
Throughout December, activist organizations worked to stamp out the religious significance of Christmas. As December began, the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) issued a pamphlet, “The December Dilemma: Guidelines for Public Schools During the December holiday.” The guidelines would severely limit the mention of Christmas in public schools. The Catholic League responded with a parody of the ADL guidelines, called “The December Celebration,” which outlined exactly what is legitimate and permissible in the recognition of Christmas within public schools.

At the same time, the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) was challenging the erection of Nativity scenes in Lincoln, Nebraska; Lexington, Massachusetts; Lafayette, Indiana and elsewhere.

The Catholic League is does not condone the use of government funds to pay for the placement of religious symbols on public property, but supports the erection of such symbols if done voluntarily with private funding. The Catholic League secured a permit in New York City to erect a Nativity scene in Central Park, as it has done for the last several years. Jews erect a menorah and Muslims place a Crescent and Star.

December 4
Mojave Desert, CA
 — The ACLU targeted the National Park Service over a Mojave Desert memorial to local men who fought in World War I. The memorial was in the shape of a cross. The ACLU threatened legal action saying, “A cross promotes Christian beliefs over others, which is not the role of government.” The park service promised to remove the cross.

December 5
San Francisco, CA 
— The Philanthropy by Design charity group held a holiday party featuring entertainment by the Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence. The All Design Industry Holiday Party was held at the San Francisco Design Center/Galleria. When a San Francisco designer who is Catholic, complained, she was told the “sisters,” whose entertainment involves ridiculing nuns and Catholic teachings and practices, had performed at other charity events and “were not a problem.”

December 6
Washington County, IN
 — A settlement between the American Civil Liberties Union and Washington County officials will allow the Ten Commandments to be posted on public property. The settlement allows the commandments to be posted along with other historical documents. The original suit, filed by an Indiana resident, claimed the marker was a shrine in violation of the separation of church and state.

December 8
Allegheny County, PA
 — Americans United for the Separation of Church and State threatened to sue Allegheny County over a bronze plaque listing the Ten Commandments that has hung silently on the county courthouse since 1918. Robert Bronson of Americans United said the plaque is a violation of the First Amendment because it is outside a government building.

December 11
Topeka, KS
 — Topeka residents Mary Lou Schmidt and Darlene Stearns filed suit against Shawnee County Treasurer Rita Cline over posters in Cline’s offices that read, “In God We Trust.” Schmidt, who described herself as a pagan, originally objected back in April. U.S. District Court Judge Sam Crow dismissed the case, calling it “patently frivolous.”

He said the two failed to prove they were harmed in any way nor could they prove their own speech rights were violated. Judge Crow said the lawsuit was “so lacking in foundation” that he ordered them to pay Cline’s legal fees.

December 13
Elkhart, IN
 — A federal appeals court ruled that a Ten Commandments monument on the lawn of an Elkhart municipal building violated laws separating church and state. While lawyers for the city argued the monument had historical significance, the court ruled the freestanding tablet could not be stripped of its “sacred significance.” The original suit, brought by Elkhart residents William Brooks and Michael Suetkamp, was thrown out. It was successfully appealed by the Indiana Civil Liberties union.

December 15
Greenville, KY
 — An attempt to post the Ten Commandments in the Muhlenberg County Courthouse was threatened by the American Civil Liberties Union of Kentucky. A nonprofit group asked that the commandments be posted as an historical document. The ACLU of Kentucky had brought similar lawsuits against Pulaski and McCreary counties.

December 18
Fort Gibson, OK
 — Threatened legal action by the group Americans United for Separation of Church and State led Fort Gibson school officials to advise the band director to change the band’s performance. At issue was a high school halftime show featuring hymns and the band marching in the shape of a cross. An attorney for Americans United wrote to the school board and said the songs performed, including “I Saw the Light” and “Gospel John,” violated the Constitution “because it sends a message to both the members of the band and those who attend the football game that the Christian religion is both endorsed and preferred.” Band director Gordon Macklin said, “I was just a band director looking for some good music.”

December 19
Olathe, KS
 — The Olathe Public Library stopped the practice of marking books as “suitable for Christians.” Dick Kurtenbach, executive director of the ACLU of Kansas and Western Missouri threatened legal action saying the practice violates the separation of church and state as provided in the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment.

December 21
Plattsmouth, NE
 — The Nebraska chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union announced their intention to sue the city of Plattsmouth in an effort to get a monument of the Ten Commandments removed from a city park. The marker was paid for by the Fraternal Order of Eagles and was originally placed in 1965. The ACLU Nebraska chapter executive director Tim Butz asked the city council to take it down, calling it an illegal “establishment of religion” under the First Amendment.




The Arts

March 23
New York, NY
 — The Whitney Museum hosted a display that included a work by German artist Hans Haacke called “Sanitation.” The title was a play on words on the title of the controversial exhibit at the Brooklyn Museum of Art called “Sensation” which featured elephant dung and pornographic pictures on the picture of a female entitled, “Holy Virgin Mary.” “Sanitation” associated New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani with Nazism for protesting the “Sensation” exhibit.

April
Naples, FL
 — An art exhibit called “Confrontational Clay” was displayed at the Philharmonic Center for the Arts. The exhibit, by curator Judith Schwartz, is heavily supported by the National Endowment for the Arts. It included a piece that featured a toilet, topped by a statue of the Sacred Heart wearing a Mickey Mouse hat. When a museum visitor complained, the CEO of the center apologized and said “it would not happen again.”

April
Oklahoma City, OK
 — A painting of a pope sporting an eye patch was displayed at the Oklahoma State Capitol. The painting, from a series called “Popepourri” by O. Gail Poole, was eventually removed after state Sen. Tim Pope called it “unchristian.”

April 26
New York, NY
 — The Irondale Ensemble Project performed Dario Fo’s “The Pope and the Witch” at the Theatre for the New City in New York’s East Village. Newsday described the play as involving “a heroin-addicted, paranoid Pope called John Paul II, along with scheming priests, bumbling nuns and monks, corrupt cops and other assorted worthies from Fo’s stable of demons.” The pope is depicted as advocating birth control and the legalization of drugs. Both the Irondale Ensemble Project and the Theatre for the New City received public money through the National Endowment for the Arts.

When the NEA’s yearly funding was up for debate on the floor of the House of Representatives in Washington, several members of Congress moved to reduce the budget citing the case of “The Pope and the Witch.” When the NEA explained that the “Pope and the Witch” was not specifically funded, the Catholic League noted that the monies received by both organizations supported all their actions. Though the NEA’s budget was not trimmed, an increase requested by its supporters was denied.

April 29 – June 29
Former “Monty Python” comedian Eric Idle toured across the country with his show, “Eric Idle Exploits Monty Python.” Among the acts was one titled “Every Sperm is Sacred” and was sung by three women dressed as nuns and a man in a red cardinal’s cassock. Pictures of sperm interspersed with photos of Pope John Paul II were displayed on a large video screen.

May
Little Rock, AK
 — The “Confrontational Clay” exhibit moved on to the Decorative Arts Museum at the Arkansas Arts Center. The exhibit still included the piece with the toilet, topped by a statue of the Sacred Heart wearing the Mickey Mouse hat.

June 5 – September 5
San Francisco, CA
 — The San Francisco Museum of Modern Art hosted an art exhibit featuring the work of Robert Gober. Among his creations was a pile of newspapers ready to be recycled. The top paper was a copy of the New York Times from July 19, 1992. The headline was altered from the original to read, “Vatican Condones Discrimination Against Homosexuals.” The real headline read, “Vatican Condones Gay Rights Limit.” Under the altered headline was an altered advertisement showing Gober in a wedding gown.

July 13 – October 22
New York, NY
 — New York’s Whitney Museum hosted an exhibition by Barbara Kruger. Among the works by the feminist artist is a picture of John Cardinal O’Connor. The caption under it read, “Pope Fetus I.” A book in the museum’s gift shop titled, “Thinking of You—Barbara Kruger,” contained the same picture with the caption, “Pope Fetus I, poster project, New York, 1990.”

July 30
New York, NY
 — A new play opened off-Broadway called “Avow.” The play is the work of Bill C. Davis and it centers around a radical priest who refuses to bless a homosexual union. The priest eventually has his celibacy tested when he falls in love with the sister of one of the gay men (she is pregnant out of wedlock). The New York Times described the play as “ridiculing the attitudes of the Catholic Church toward gays, unwed mothers and priestly celibacy.” Another reviewer noted that, “The anti-Catholic humor…drew big laughs.” Davis is the person who authored the anti-Catholic play “Mass Appeal” but had a string of flops until returning to the theme of the priesthood.

August
Norfolk, VA
 — The city of Norfolk secured from the Chrysler Museum of Art a statue to be placed in a downtown intersection until a permanent display could be funded. But the United Jewish Federation of Tidewater protested and town officials removed the art. The artwork was a statue of St. Francis of Assisi.

October
Providence, RI 
— “Misgivings,” Dave Kane’s one-man-playing-a-priest-show played in Providence. The Providence Journal-Bulletin said, “…there is no doubt Kane has a lot of issues to take up with the church [sic], and sometimes he is pretty angry.”

October 25
Hollywood, CA
 — The play “Bare” debuted at the Hudson Main Stage Theatre in Hollywood. The play is about the love affair of Jason and Peter, two Catholic high school students at upscale St. Celia’s Boarding School. Daily Variety describes the plot as “focusing on the senior year dilemmas of the casually confident golden boy Jason, the school’s star athlete and top scholar, who is also nonchalantly enjoying the secretive sexual favors of the deeply introspective friend Peter.”

November
Houston, TX
 — An exhibit titled “Sextablos: Works on Metal” ran from November through mid-January, 2001 at The Redbud Gallery. The title is a play on “retablos,” which are Mexican paintings of the saints on sheets of tin. Amid many pornographic images, one by Michael Thompson portrays a naked woman performing fellatio on Christ nailed to the cross.




Business / Workplace

February
Brooklyn, NY
 — The Morning Star Christian Books and Gift Store in Brooklyn featured publications by the notoriously anti-Catholic publisher Jack Chick. The store had a large display right near the front door that featured booklets such as Are Roman Catholics Christians, Double Cross and The Godfathers. Each was a direct attack on the Catholic Church and the pope.

April 26
Atlanta, GA
 — A series of tattoo parlors in Georgia and California were going by the name Sacred Heart Tattoo, Inc. The company’s website featured an intermingling of sexual images with images of the Sacred Heart of Jesus. The Catholic League wrote to the owner, Tony Olivas, asking him to separate the use of his name from that of the holy Catholic symbol.

May
San Antonio, TX
 — The chauffeured transportation service People’s Express featured a logo for its company that looked nearly identical to the Chi-Rho, the Greek letters representing Christ’s name. The Catholic League wrote to company president Robert Ortega showing him a picture of the Chi-Rho along with an explanation of what it means to Catholics and a request to change the logo.

June
New Orleans, LA
 — The House of Blues started running a special theme night every Sunday called “Resurrection.” The promotional flyer was full of material patently offensive to Catholics. Each night featured a special performer including Kevin Aviance who sings songs with obscene names while dressed in drag. The Catholic League wrote to the principle owner of the House of Blues chain, actor Dan Ackroyd, asking him to recognize that this theme-night crosses the line from satire to insult.

June 15
The June 15th edition of Booklist, published by the American Library Association, carried a review of a book by Timothy Freke and Peter Gandy entitled, The Jesus Mysteries: Was the “Original Jesus” a Pagan God? Reviewer Steven Schroeder admitted that the book was anti-Catholic and that the bigotry displayed by the authors was “distracting” but otherwise wrote a positive review. The Catholic League wrote to Bill Ott, editor and publisher of Booklist, which is relied upon by thousands of librarians in making new acquisitions, to ask if any anti-Jewish, anti-black or anti-gay books had been treated in a similar manner. Ott responded that he criticized Schroeder for his “unfortunate flippancy of tone” and “inappropriate choice” of words.

August
Flat Rock, NC
 — A restaurant and wholesale bakery named the Immaculate Consumption operates out of North Carolina. In addition to the name —an obvious take-off of the Immaculate Conception—the logo depicted a caricature of the Virgin Mary.

September
The catalog company Fandom makes available different collectibles from movies, TV series, etc. The recent catalog featured the “Buddy Christ” character from the movie “Dogma.” The caption read, “Cover your ass this millennium with the new Buddy Christ Dashboard Statue inspired by the one seen in Kevin Smith’s ‘Dogma.'” It sold for $12.95.

September
The Hamilton Collection offered consumers the Cherished Teddies Miniature Nativity, a nativity scene that substitutes little bears for the people in the traditional nativity scene. The company did not offer a “teddy bear rabbi” for Hanukah or a “teddy bear imam” for Ramadan.

September
The Vermont Teddy Bear Company offered “The Special Edition Nativity Set.” The set featured Vermont Teddy Bears in place of Jesus, Mary and Joseph. The company advertised the set as, “Heirloom-quality teddy bears portraying Mary, Joseph and the Baby Jesus…Sure to sell out by Christmas!”

September 7
Grand Rapids, MI
 — A Grand Rapids bookstore singled out Catholicism for a special display. Schuler Books and Music had a prominent display of “Catholic School” collectibles. It consisted of items making fun of priests and nuns including: Catholic School salt and pepper shakers, “Sister Sprong”— a mean looking nun on a spring— and other items.

September 22
New York, NY
 — The Exit Nightclub in Manhattan sent out a flyer promoting a special night at the club. The flyer read, “FREE ADMISSION ‘TILL MIDNIGHT TO ALL LADIES WEARING A CATHOLIC SCHOOL UNIFORM.” Accompanying the free admission offer was a woman coyly dressed in a Catholic school uniform with her blouse unbuttoned and a man dreaming about her.

October
A new fashion group called “Imitation of Christ” is buying old clothes from the Salvation Army and then “crucifying” them by staining and cutting them up. The clothes are then sold as trendy fashion. William Donohue told the New York Daily News that it is “a cheap way to make a fast buck off rather stupid people.”

October
Blue Q Corporation advertised in their catalogue a “Mix’ n Match” refrigerator magnet set depicting a figure of Mary in a prayer-like pose with a magnet of Jesus in a stroller and a Catholic school girl uniform. In a box below the magnet’s description it reads, “If you are not completely satisfied with the tone of this product please accept our humble apologies.” William Donohue wrote to ask if they would sell a Reverend Jesse Jackson Mix’ n Match with a Baby Sambo in a stroller and a Nazi schoolboy uniform. He wrote, “if you think that the above might be offensive, then why do you continue offending Catholics and their beliefs with your magnet set?”

October
In its Inside Borders catalogue for October, Borders — the nation’s largest book chain — had an ad for John Cornwell’s Hitler’s Pope. The ad described Pope Pius XII as “arguably the most dangerous churchman in modern history.” William Donohue wrote to Robert Di Romualdo, Borders chairman, to complain about a patently biased advertising blurb. Borders responded that it had no plans to post the ad again.

October
Milwaukee, WI
 — Harry W. Schwartz Bookshops of Milwaukee, WI., in advertising Cornwell’s book, referred to Pope Pius XII as “the most dangerous churchman in history.” William Donohue wrote to David Schwartz, chairman of the Schwartz bookshops, asking that such slanderous advertising be withdrawn. Mr. Schwartz responded that he was “appalled to see” the advertisement “which brought a strenuous rebuke from me to my advertising staff.”

October/November
Insight Media offers a catalogue of videos and CD-ROMS for high school and college students. Under its religion sections, it offers fair and sensitive selections on everything from Animism to Voodoo. Under Roman Catholicism, there are two listings: one on the Inquisition, the other on the Church’s “origins and growth into a political force in world events.” Both are negative portrayals of Catholicism. Catholic League members protested and the head of the company announced that his staff would more carefully screen new videos on Catholicism.

October 24
Rockaway, NJ
 — The Party City chain stores were selling priest and nun costumes for Halloween. There were no signs of any rabbi or imam costumes available.

November
The clothing line Dolce & Gabbana ran an ad in national magazines promoting their latest fashions. The models in the ad were surrounded by religious imagery including statues of the Virgin Mary and Jesus.

December
Berkeley, CA
 — Bear Basics, a store in Berkeley, offered T-shirts for sale that said “F— Christmas,” though the shirt spelled out the actual obscenity. When the Catholic League inquired, it was informed that there were no similar T-shirts in regard to Hanukkah.

December
The forced secularization of Christmas was evident in numerous commercial businesses and internet shopping guides. While Hanukkah remained properly represented in its religious context, Christmas was consistently reduced to its secular symbols, if not eliminated completely.

At 1-800-FLOWERS.com there were no religious items for Christmas, but a Star of David charm necklace for Hanukkah was featured; the Christmas selection for FTD.com had all secular items but sold Star Shaped Hanukkah cookies; Hallmark’s “Holiday Gifts” selection had no religious items for Christmas, but sold a Silver Menorah Candleholder; Bloomingdale’s had a “Chanukah” Gift Card set but no Christmas Gift Card set; Studiodaedre.com sold a “Chanukah Menorah” but no religious items for Christmas; Altavista.com explained the secular meaning of Christmas but offered a religious interpretation of Hanukkah; Yahoo.com listed six religions under “Religious Holidays,” but only one of them is presented with an “Opposing Views” category— Christianity.




Education

January
Sarasota, FL
 — The Sarasota County Superintendent of Schools David Bennett was profiled in Sarasota magazine. In the profile, Mr. Bennett was quoted as saying his interest in civil rights started when, as a child in Chicago in the 1950s and 1960s, he heard that the Catholic Church was buying up homes in certain areas so that blacks couldn’t purchase them. He provided no evidence of this charge or explanation for the statement, which appears to have been hearsay around the dinner table when he was growing up.

January
Los Angeles, CA
 — The University of Southern California’s Fisher Gallery hosted an art exhibit called “Crossing Boundaries.” Among the pieces in the exhibit were “The Source, Virgins and Crosses” and “El Nino’s Wake.” The former is made of 30 crosses and a blank outline of Our Lady of Guadalupe images without Mary; instead, her halo is left to resemble a vaginal orifice. In the latter artwork, it appears the Baby Jesus is naked at a wake.

January
Oregon City, OR
 — At the Pauling Center at Clackamas Community College art was displayed called “Two Popes Boinking” which featured two men wearing papal tiaras having sex. The Catholic League wrote to the president of the school to complain. The faculty subsequently voted to remove the artwork from the gallery. A panel discussion was held on the controversy that included a representative of the Archdiocese of Portland.

January 26
Blackwood, NJ
 — A thirteen-year-old honor student at C.W. Lewis Middle School received an assignment in which he was to write about the purpose of spring break. When the student wrote that the original purpose was to give time off for Easter, his teacher objected. The teacher told the student that he was not allowed to write about religion and if he did, he would get a zero. After the Catholic League provided guidance, the issue was satisfactorily resolved. The student was allowed to have his essay graded on its merits.

February
Greenville, SC
 — Bob Jones University became the center of media attention during the presidential primary season when its anti-Catholic philosophies came to light. On it’s website, the fundamentalist Protestant school referred to Catholicism as a “cult.” It also stated, “The Roman Church is not another Christian Denomination. It is a satanic counterfeit, an ecclesiastic tyranny over the souls of men…the Mother of Harlots…a monstrous abomination.”

March
Walker County, AL
 — Officials of the Walker County public school system told Kandice Smith, a sixth grader at Curry Middle School in Jasper, that she could not wear a gold cross outside her mandatory school uniform. The girl and her family sued school officials to overturn a policy against such items. The officials said they had an interest in “keeping distractions down” and in cracking down on gang clothing. The school district finally reached an agreement with the family, permitting the student to wear her cross.

March
Springfield, OR
 — Thurston High School entered a statewide acting competition with the play “The Wool Gatherer.” The play makes reference to a boy and girl whipping each other with rosary beads. Parents complained about this scene and other scenes in other plays entered in the competition including some that were sexually explicit. The sexually explicit scenes were edited out. The anti-Catholic scene remained.

March 8
St. Louis, MO
 — The Organization of American Historians decided to hold its annual meeting at St. Louis University, a Catholic school. A group of Jewish historians objected to the venue. The group said the crucifixes in the classrooms were symbols of “lethal anti-Semitism.” “To us,” wrote one historian, “it [the crucifix] is a particular potent historical symbol of aggressive, even lethal anti-Semitism.” The historian went on, “If they really want to spare the feelings of Jews,” Christians “shouldn’t display the cross on the outside of their churches, or wear crosses around their necks. Indeed, Christians shouldn’t even have crosses inside their churches, or inside their purses or pockets, because it is the same anti-Semitic symbol, hidden though it is from their Jewish brethren. In fact, the hiddenness [sic] makes it seem even more sinister and sneaky.”

March 14
New York, NY
 — Channel One Network makes its way into classrooms around the country, including Catholic schools. During the papal trip to the Holy Land, articles by Cindy Lin for the Channel One Network were biased against the Church under the guise of education. She stated that the papal apology was “the first time any pope has made a public plea for forgiveness for the horrors committed by Catholic groups over the centuries.” Another claimed that “the church is said to have treated badly groups such as women, gays, minorities and the poor.”

March 28
Texas
 — Dena Marks, head of the Texas ADL, equated prayer with hate speech during Court TV’s “Pros and Cons.” The discussion was about a practice in a Texas school district that allowed students to speak to the crowd before a football game, choosing a prayer if they wished. The practice was being reviewed by the U. S. Supreme Court. Marks said, “When it [prayer] excludes certain people, when it excludes the people who aren’t the majority or the people who aren’t saying that prayer, that can also be a trigger for hatred.”

April 12
Poughkeepsie, NY
 — Vassar College hosted a forum on “Literature, Homosexuality, and Catholicism in the Nineteenth Century,” featuring Richard Dellamora from Trent University in Canada and Ellis Hanson from Cornell. The forum was sponsored by the English Department, the Office of the President and the Queer Coalition. During the talks, Hanson equated Christianity with sadomasochism. Hanson charged the Church with being both homophobic and homoerotic. Dellamora said that the Crucifixion is a symbol of sexual dissidence. In advance of the talks, the Catholic League had contacted the Vassar president’s office to get more information on what would be discussed. The president’s office admitted it didn’t know but said that it didn’t matter what the subject was because President Frances Daly Ferguson supports “free speech and the gay students.”

May
Several college Christian student groups came under fire for their religious beliefs. At Tufts University in Massachusetts the Tufts Christian Fellowship was “derecognized” and lost all funding from the school because the organization would not let a bisexual student hold a leadership position. The group believed homosexual activity was incompatible with their beliefs. Similar restrictions were applied at other schools to prevent Christian groups from maintaining organizations compatible with their beliefs.

Middlebury College in Vermont enacted anti-bias language that said no student may be eliminated from being considered for leadership in any campus groups because of beliefs or identity. And at Whitman college in Washington State, an evangelical group is under fire because a student bylaw says groups are not allowed to consider one sexual orientation superior to another.

May
East Lansing, MI
 — The State News, the student newspaper at Michigan State University, featured a comic strip called “Fetus X” that regularly ridiculed Jesus.

May 2
Roslyn Heights, NY
 — The student newspaper of Roslyn High School published its annual April Fools issue May 2—a full month late. Among the articles offensive to Catholics was one comparing a student to Jesus. Following a complaint from Catholic League Long Island chapter president Frank Schroeder, Roslyn High principal Dr. Jason Stoller agreed the edition of the paper “crossed the line” and was particularly offensive at Easter. He then wrote a response that was published in the student newspaper.

June
Claremore, OK
 — Rogers State University offered an art appreciation telecourse called “A World of Art: Works in Progress.” In the course was a video called “Temple of Confessions.” It featured a depiction of a Madonna with an exposed potbelly dragging a cross into a religious ceremony being led by a priest with two devil’s horns. Cannibalism was also shown. Following complaints from the Catholic League, Oklahoma Governor Frank Keating agreed some of the images were objectionable. School officials responded that the content of the telecourse was a matter of academic freedom.

July/August
Providence, RI
 — The Brown Alumni Monthly of Brown University printed an analysis of how students substitute the profane for the sacred. In the article, author Ryan Humphrey offered up the usual canard of Pope Pius XII’s “silence” during the Holocaust.

July 27
San Diego, CA
 — The play “Sheridan” began a run at the La Jolla Playhouse on the campus of the University of California at San Diego, a state school. The play depicts a priest character as cruel and manipulative.

August 1
Miami, FL
 — The Florida International University publication The Beacon published an article by Steve Coats that charged, among other things, that Pope John Paul was a “doddering old fool”; Catholic priests have been “bum-rushing altar boys for as long as history has been recorded”; the Vatican promotes “homophobia”; Catholicism is to blame for the killing of Matthew Shepard (the Wyoming man who was murdered because he was a homosexual); the pope should “come out of the closet”; the Church is the world’s largest stockholder; and the Church is “evil.”

September
New Hyde Park, NY 
— A course to be taught in the Herrick School District in New Hyde Park, NY, on the Jews of Italy planned to include a “trial” of Pope Pius XII. After contact from the Catholic League, the superintendent apologized saying it was a mistake to say there would be a trial. The teacher of the course told the Catholic League that there would be a discussion of Pope Pius XII, but no trial.

September
Virginia
 — The ACLU is appealing after a district court allowed Virginia schools to proceed with a “moment of silence” in public schools. It brought the case because among the actions allowed in the moment of silence would be silent prayer.

October 5
Santa Fe, NM 
— Officials of the Santa Fe school district threatened to paint over a mural dedicated to the late Cesar Estrada Chavez at the elementary school also named after him. The mural included images of Our Lady of Guadalupe and crucifixes. School officials said the move to cover-up the mural came because of concerns over the separation of church and state.

November
Brooklyn, NY — A large mural adorned a wall used for handball at an intermediate school in a high crime area. A local artist had been commissioned by a neighborhood resident to pay tribute to the 27 youngsters killed in the area. The mural was painted over when school officials discovered that Jesus Christ and the Virgin Mary were featured.

November 1
Urbana-Champaign, IL 
— Catholics for a Free Choice ran an advertisement in the University of Illinois student newspaper, the Daily Illini, that misrepresented Church teaching on abortion. On Election Day, the campus Catholic Newman Center priests and students responded with an ad headlined, “The Catholic Church is pro-life.” The ad was signed by hundreds of students and included the text of a statement on abortion written by the bishops.

November 13
Wilmington, DE
 — The News Journal of Wilmington ran a story on a talk at the University of Delaware by Jack P. McGough, who was identified as a “nationally known Holocaust educator” and a professor at the University. In his talk, McGough singled out the Catholic Church for being the worst denier of the Holocaust.

In investigating McGough, the Catholic League discovered that he was not a nationally known expert on the Holocaust or any other historical subject, that he is neither an author, historian nor social scientist, and that he was not a professor at the University of Delaware. The News Journal subsequently ran a correction.

November 21
Newton County, GA 
— The Newton County school board voted to remove the words “Christmas Break” from their school calendar and replace it with “Semester Break.” The change came under pressure from the American Civil Liberties Union which claimed the word “Christmas” constituted “an endorsement of a particular religion.”

December
Cobb County, GA
 — Durham Middle School principal Linda Clark sent a memo to teachers and staff telling them not to use the word “Christmas” because “it is important that our lessons, discussions and decorations remain religion-free.”

December
Lafayette Parish, LA
 — Rastafarian students in Lafayette Parish are being defended by the ACLU after they were banned from school for wearing their hair in braids and covering their heads. The ACLU defended them on religious expression grounds. There was no explanation from as to why Rastafarians are allowed religious expression in schools while others are not.

December 1
New York, NY
 — The Anti-Defamation League (ADL) issued a pamphlet, “The December Dilemma: Guidelines for Public Schools During the December Holiday” which would virtually eliminate the religious context of Christmas from the public schools. The Catholic League responded with a parody of the ADL material called, “The December Celebration” which outlined what is permissible and legitimate in acknowledging the Christmas season within public schools.

December 13
Fishers, IN
 — Students at New Briton Elementary School were presented with a multicultural understanding of the holiday season that focused on the secular traditions of Christmas —Santa Claus, cookies, elves, stockings, lights, the Grinch, etc.—but made no mention of the religious significance of the season in a memo outlining “Holidays Around the World.” However, on the day set aside for Hanukkah, the religious symbols of the celebration were displayed and explained.




Government

February
Shirley, MA 
— Inmates in a state prison had their rosary beads confiscated in what prison officials claim was a crackdown on gang-related violence. A court determined the corrections department could “curtail inmates rights in order to achieve legitimate correctional goals.” Prisoners who say their right to worship is in jeopardy are appealing to a higher court.

February 6
Boston, MA
 — The Massachusetts Department of Corrections had in place an anti-gang policy that resulted in the confiscation of rosary beads from prisoners. Corrections officials said the policy was necessary “to achieve legitimate correctional goals or to maintain prison security.” The American Civil Liberties Union assisted an inmate who sued over the policy.

February 14
Queens, NY
 — Vice President Al Gore, seeking the Democratic presidential nomination, received an endorsement from Rev. Floyd Flake inside the Allen African Methodist Episcopal Church with Flake saying, “…you read it well: this should be the next president of the United States.” Flake noted that as a non-profit church, it would be against IRS regulations to make such an endorsement. Just weeks earlier, Archbishop Justin Rigali of St. Louis was criticized for imploring Catholics to “elect those who respect the sacredness of life.”

February
Greenville, SC
 — Governor George W. Bush launched his South Carolina primary campaign with a speech and rally at Bob Jones University, a notoriously anti-Catholic institution. The school’s website referred to the Catholic Church as “the Mother of Harlots” and Bob Jones III responded to criticism that if “there are those who wish to charge us with being anti-Catholicism [sic], we plead guilty.” Subsequently, in a letter to Cardinal John O’Connor, with a copy to William Donohue at the Catholic League, Governor Bush said he regretted not taking the opportunity to separate himself from the anti-Catholic views of Bob Jones University.

February 18
Florence, SC
 — Republican presidential contender George W. Bush made an appearance at the Ebenezer Baptist Church in Florence, asking for the votes of churchgoers. Meanwhile, Hillary Rodham Clinton and Al Gore, both candidates for political office, appeared at the Wilborn Temple Church of God in Christ in Albany, New York.

March 23
Washington, DC
 — After four months of non-stop controversy, the search for a new chaplain in the House of Representatives came to a close with the selection of Fr. Daniel Coughlin, Vicar for Priests of the Archdiocese of Chicago. An 18-member House committee (9 Republicans and 9 Democrats) presented 3 finalists for the chaplain vacancy to the House leadership.

The top choice of the committee was Fr. Timothy O’Brien, a Marquette University professor. He was deemed qualified by the majority of members of both parties on the committee. Speaker Dennis Hastert and Majority Leader Dick Armey bypassed Fr. O’Brien and chose a Presbyterian, the Rev. Charles Wright.

During the selection process, Fr. O’Brien was asked questions that were inappropriate at best, such as whether his Roman collar would be divisive or an obstacle to ministering to congress (the outgoing Protestant chaplain wore a collar for decades). The house leadership—Speaker Hastert and Majority leader Armey—enlisted a number of surrogates to lobby the Catholic League to drop Fr. O’Brien’s cause. At one point Joe Eule, press secretary for a House Member J. D. Heyworth, called to strong-arm the league into folding on the issue. The league held firm.

At one point, aides to Speaker Hastert claimed in the press that the Rev. Bill Graham called the speaker’s office to express support for Rev. Wright. Hours later, Rev. Graham issued a statement saying he did no such thing; he simply wanted the process to be free from politics. In an extraordinary move, Hastert named Fr. Coughlin as the new chaplain, introducing him on the House floor following the withdrawal of Rev. Wright at Hastert’s request.

April 19
New Jersey
 — Officials of New Jersey Transit, having originally invited a number of groups to perform at the grand opening of a new light rail system, shortly before the event told a Catholic group they could not perform “because of separation of church and state.” A gospel group from a local Baptist Church was allowed to sing.

Fr. Kevin Ashe and his Park Performing Arts Center in Union City complained about the double standard. At first, New Jersey Transit officials said the gospel singers qualified because gospel was “widely accepted as a mainstream category of music.”

After a statement to the press by the Catholic League and subsequent call to the governor’s office, New Jersey Transit issued a full apology to anyone offended, admitted their mistake and asked “the forgiveness of Father Ashe and any other members of the New Jersey community who have been offended by our actions.”

May
Cuero, TX
 — Inmates at the Texas Department of Criminal Justice-Stevenson Unit who have religious dietary restrictions were routinely given the opportunity to choose meals without pork. The same opportunity was not afforded Catholic inmates who might want to request meatless meals during Lent. The Catholic League wrote to the warden asking that the religious beliefs of all inmates be respected. New directives were issued, effective October 1, allowing inmates the ability to choose a meat-free meal every day.

June
Hartford, CT
 — The pro-abortion group Catholics for a Free Choice was included on a list of charities eligible to receive donations from the Connecticut State Employees’ Campaign for Charitable Giving. The anti-Catholic group’s listing on the charity list became apparent when the Connecticut Commission for Human Rights and Opportunities ruled the Boy Scouts could not be on the list because they excluded open homosexuals from leadership roles.

July 11
Washington, DC 
— The legislative body of the District of Columbia, the D.C. Council passed a bill mandating health insurance coverage of contraceptives without a provision exempting Catholic hospitals and employers on religious grounds. During debate on the bill, which passed 13-0, council member Jim Graham called the Catholic Church homophobic and urged his colleagues against “deferring to Rome.”

July 26
Washington, DC
 — Congressman James P. Moran (D-VA) lashed out at the Catholic Church for its position on homosexuality. Moran was angry that House Republicans placed an attachment to the D. C. Council budget bill that would nullify the controversial contraceptive health care bill.

In offering support for councilman Jim Graham’s objections to the Republican initiative, Moran spoke of his “disappointment, and the intolerance, and yes, the hypocrisy of the Catholic church as an institution towards homosexuality…”

An aide to Rep. Moran subsequently deleted the anti-Catholic statement in the Congressional Record. Moran was told to restore the original language and was informed by Rep. Bill Thomas, chairman of the Committee on House Administration, that he had violated ethics rules, which prohibit such alterations.

August
Boscobel, WI
 — Two inmates at the Super Max Correctional Institution were being denied a shipment of spiritual books on the grounds that they were contraband. One of the books was written by Mother Angelica of the Eternal Word Television Network. An inquiry showed that just about everything from book to paperclips were deemed “contraband.” After several conversations between prison officials and the Catholic League, an agreement was worked out and the inmates received the materials.

August
Denver, CO
 — Denver International Airport has an interdenominational chapel used by Christians, Jews and Muslims. On Sundays and holy days of obligation, Mass is celebrated. A brief announcement of the upcoming Mass would be made over the public address 15 minutes prior. Officials cancelled the public announcement after an individual complained saying it was a violation of separation of Church and State.

The local chapter of the ACLU defended the ban, arguing that only Catholic services are announced over the public address system. The ACLU did not mention that the Jews and Muslims preferred not to use the public address system and defended the rights of Catholics to do so. William Donohue stated that this “is a straight First Amendment case that will be won in court if necessary.” On December 5th, airport authorities issued a revised rule that allowed a public announcement of the existence of the interfaith chapel and a number to call for scheduled services.

The Catholic League protested that this was essentially a gag order aimed specifically at Catholics and made under threats from the ACLU.

August 11
Los Angeles, CA
 — U.S. Rep. Loretta Sanchez relocated a fund-raiser scheduled for the Playboy Mansion during the Democratic national convention after an all-out effort by the Catholic League to quash the event.

The league originally wrote to Vice President Al Gore asking him to use his influence (Sanchez was his hand-picked vice chairman of the Democratic National Committee) to cancel the event which was scheduled for August 15th, the Feast of the Assumption. The league’s objections were:

· The fund-raiser was held in the name of “Hispanic Unity.” As most Hispanics are Catholic, the Feast of the Assumption was an offensive date to hold the event. The Assumption is the celebration of the ascension of the Virgin Mary into heaven.

· The Playboy Foundation had in the past funded Catholics for a Free Choice—a fundamentally anti-Catholic group.

· The principals of Playboy Enterprises, Hugh and Christie Hefner, had made numerous derogatory remarks against the Catholic Church and its teachings.

After a media blitz by the league, Sanchez relented and moved the fund-raiser to another location.

August 29
Allentown, PA
 — The book Sammy Keyes and the Sisters of Mercy was on the public library reading list for youngsters at Parkland Community Library. A passage reads, “Now, lots of priests walk around all day acting holy, but when they’re all alone, there’s no doubt about it, they pick their noses and burp and pass gas just like you and me. Not that father Mayhew. Well, okay, maybe he burps now and then but you can bet he says, ‘Excuse me’ to God when he says it.” A review of the book says the protagonist is “pitted against a trio of alleged nuns, who tour the country conning parishes out of their savings.”

October
Norfolk, MA
 — In April, Andrea Saltzberg Emodi of the Department of Corrections in Massachusetts, issued a directive informing all chaplains that they were to discontinue distributing greeting cards. The Catholic League asked for an explanation. Emodi responded in October that concerns had been raised that certain religions were being favored by the Department’s practice of allowing chaplains to distribute holy cards. Therefore, only “generic holiday cards” will be permitted “in the inmate canteen …and to discontinue the practice of dissemination of holiday cards by specific religions.” Instead of making certain that everyone’s religious rights are respected, the decision was made to disrespect all religious rights.

November 20
Eugene, OR
 — The city manager of Eugene issued a directive banning Christmas trees from public property as they are considered religious symbols. He justified the ban as “practicing diversity.” The order ignored a 1989 Supreme Court ruling that allowed erecting Christmas trees on public property as they were not deemed religious symbols. Americans United for Separation of Church and State, the ACLU and the Interfaith Alliance backed the ban.

November 29
Lexington, MA 
— Newly enacted Lexington town regulations banned all religious displays from the town’s historic Battle Green. Despite being challenged by the local Knights of Columbus, who in previous years erected a nativity scene on the green, town officials defended their rules in federal court. They successfully argued the regulations were “content neutral”—they applied to any unattended structures, no matter what point of view they express. Town officials eventually agreed to allow a one-time, live nativity performance on the green.

December
Vancouver, WA
 — Bus drivers for C-TRAN were ordered not to wear hats, vests, or neckties during the Christmas season that depict religious themes, though secular Christmas themes were permissible. When challenged to cite the law requiring such a ban, C-TRAN responded with a section of the Constitution of the State of Washington forbidding public money or property to be appropriated or applied for religious worship. That did not explain how the personal property of a bus driver could be considered public property. Officials in other transit systems throughout the State of Washington had no such restrictions on employees wearing seasonal attire with a religious theme.

December
Greenville, KY
 — At the demand of the ACLU a court in Muhlenberg County in Greenville asked the attorney general to review the posting of the 10 Commandments as part of a historical display at the county courthouse.

December
Elkart, IN — A federal appeals court in December ruled that a 10 Commandments monument on the lawn of a municipal building in Elkart, IN violated the First Amendment. The local ACLU chapter declared the ruling a victory.

December
Pittsburgh, PA
 — The ACLU deferred to Americans for Separation of Church and State in filing suit against the posting of the 10 Commandments in Pittsburgh’s Allegheny County Courthouse.

December
Louisiana
 — Three new prison chapels being built in Louisiana by private funding were challenged by the ACLU as promoting Christianity over other religions.

December
Mojave Desert, CA
 — A monument to local men who died in World War I in California’s Mojave Desert came under ACLU protest as it was shaped in the form of a cross. The National Park Service, which controls the land, allowed the ACLU to win uncontested.

December
Olathe, KS 
— The public library in Olathe, Kansas no longer marks books as suitable for Christians after protest from the ACLU.

December
Topeka, KS
 — The ACLU sued when Rita Kline, the County Treasurer in Topeka, Kansas, refused to remove posters in her office proclaiming “In God We Trust.” District Court Judge San Crow labeled the ACLU’s action “patently frivolous” and ordered the organization to pay for Cline’s legal fees.