By Kathleen Gilbert
ST. LOUIS, Missouri, December 2, 2008 (LifeSiteNews.com) - When protesters took to the streets in a nationwide rally against California's true marriage amendment,
Proposition 8, students from Saint Louis University (SLU), a Jesuit-run school, joined about 1,400 others gathered on the steps of the St. Louis courthouse. Emma Obata, a junior in the College of Arts and Sciences, said she joined the protest "because I support gay marriage, and I don't think hate should be encoded into law," reports the school's online newspaper.
Several dozen SLU students bolstered the crammed crowd of protesters waving signs and cheering homosexualist speakers. "I want to speak out. I think that this proposition goes against what the United States is about," said Thomas Bloom, a sophomore in the college of Arts and Sciences. He objected to Proposition 8 as a case of "the majority of people taking away the rights of a minority."
College Republicans president Amy Kaufman attended the rally, and despite holding a sign reading, "You can't legislate love, Republican against Prop. 8," she told the newspaper that she could not understand why the definition of marriage mattered at all. "There are bigger problems in the world. This is absurd that people are fighting so hard over the definition of a word," said Kaufman.
Like many other U.S. Catholic campuses, SLU hosts an open homosexual student group known as the Rainbow Alliance. In a section entitled, "Our Catholic Jesuit Heritage," the Rainbow Alliance web page lists other Catholic schools "bonded together by a common heritage, vision, and purpose," which also recognize homosexual pride groups.
A later survey found that 65% of current and recent students of Catholic universities between the ages of 18 and 29 agreed that "the law should permit marriage between two people of the same sex," with only 35% disagreeing.
Link (here)
An old post card of St. Louis University
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