It seems
that Cabrini College is hosting a Remembrance on
November 19. The event will have a discussion on the "conceptualization of
'gender' in our society" followed by a transgender
candlelight vigil to "honor and remember the lives of transgender
individuals fallen victim to hate."
Although a Catholic school, Cabrini makes no effort to
promote what the Church teaches about same-sex activity. Indeed, there will be
two events, called Ally 101 and Ally 201, which seek to teach people that
homosexuality is normal and that they must empathize with
"non-gender-conforming individuals."
Note another
Cabrini event earlier this year called "Your Gender-Bred
Identity" described as follows:
Challenge conceptualizations of gender and explore the
intersections of gender and sexuality as it pertains to the theory of the
"gender-bred person."
Participants will have the opportunity to decorate a
person-shaped cookie inspired by either themselves or their initial
understanding of gender.
There was also a Day of Silence described as a
"student-led action towards creating safer schools for all, regardless of
sexual orientation, gender identity, or gender expression, Day of Silence
brings attention to harassment."
Cabrini is a Catholic liberal arts college northwest of
Philadelphia, and was founded in 1957 by the Missionary Sisters of the Sacred
Heart of Jesus. It's one of the first colleges in the United States that made
community service a requirement for graduation, with a curriculum centered on social
justice. But there's no indication Cabrini promotes the Church's teaching on
the intrinsically disordered nature of same-sex relations. OREMUS.
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