April 7, 2015 (LifeSiteNews.com)
-- Children across Canada are being asked to wear a pink shirt to
school tomorrow on the “Day of Pink” to “celebrate diversity” and end
“bullying, discrimination, homophobia, transphobia, and transmisogyny.”
While lauding efforts to end bullying in school, one critic is warning
parents that the event is not actually about bullying.
“The Day of Pink is simply an excuse to promote homosexuality,” Gwen
Landolt, national vice-president of Real Women of Canada, told
LifeSiteNews.
School principals in some jurisdictions are telling parents through a
letter sent home with their children that the Day of Pink, which
happens annually on the second Wednesday in April, will include
“discussions surrounding different types of families, identities, gender
roles, homophobia and trans-phobia.”
To commemorate the day, classes will “engage in discussion about Day
of Pink and what it represents,” one of the letters obtained by
LifeSiteNews states. For grades K-3 the day includes “books and
activities about different kinds of families, gender roles.” There is no
description of the proposed “activities” or “books.” Adding to this
list, grade 4-6 students will discuss “healthy relationships,
stereotypes, discrimination (including homophobia, sexism).”
Alarmingly, the letter tells parents that conversations may go
anywhere, and teachers are allowed to stray outside curriculum
expectations.
"At times, conversations may go beyond what is specified in the
curriculum when prompted by student questions. We don't prevent such
conversations, as some of the best learning comes from these teachable
moments,” the letter states.
The letter attempts to assuage concern by assuring parents that
“activities and discussions will be age-and-developmentally appropriate
and led by professional and caring staff.”
The homosexual activist organization behind the event, Jer’s Vision, suggests that kids should organize a “diversity themed movie night” to prepare themselves for the day. Titles suggested include:
Venus Boyz – presents an “intimate look
into the real world of drag kings — women exploring their masculinity —
[that] crosses continents, traveling through drag king nightclubs from
New York to London.”
G.B.F. (Gay Best Friend) – contains a
number of same-sex make-out scenes involving a “closeted gay teen” whose
efforts to join a girls club leads to his best friend declaring that he
also is ‘gay.’
Love Free Die – tells the story of
Episcopal bishop Gene Robinson, the “first openly gay person to become a
bishop in the historic traditions of Christendom.”
The Day of Pink traces its origins to a 2007 incident when two Nova
Scotia high school students rallied everyone in their school to wear
pink to stand in solidarity with an openly ‘gay’ student who was bullied
for wearing a pink shirt.
Landolt called the day’s events “propaganda,” saying it was “one more
way to indoctrinate — take advantage of — vulnerable children.” She
said parents should be “deeply offended” that schools are forming the
values of their children according to the “biases and prejudices” of
homosexual activists.
“Children are being indoctrinated into thinking homosexuality is
normal, healthy, and virtuous. They are not told anything else, such as
how homosexuality is detrimental physically and emotionally,” she said.
The American College of Pediatricians, a medical group represented across 47 states, warned parents in 2008
of the dangers children face when homosexuality is promoted in schools.
The group stated that the “homosexual lifestyle carries grave health
risks” and that it is “premature and may be harmful” to validate a
student’s same-sex attraction during the adolescent years.
A group of concerned parents have crafted an opt out letter for
parents who do not want their children to be part of the Day of Pink.
“I do not consent that my child be exposed to anything that is
contrary to our beliefs – we believe in sexual abstinence before
marriage, as it is the ultimate prevention of STI’s and birth control.
Furthermore, the sexuality of our children is a private family matter
that we do not consent school staff to investigate or explore outside
our home,” the letter states.
LifeSiteNews reached out to a couple of principals for comment, but did not receive a response by press time.
One parent, who spoke to LifeSiteNews under condition of anonymity,
said the Day of Pink letter basically labels parents as “homophobic” and
“transphobic” if they refuse to allow their children to participate in
the Day of Pink because they don’t want their children supporting
homosexual beliefs and lifestyle. “As a culturally sensitive family, we do not impose our
beliefs and lifestyles upon others, and should not expect others to
impose, let alone promote, their lifestyles upon our children and us,”
the parent said.
Canada’s outspoken conservative commentator Mark Steyn called pink the new “color of conformity.”
“Nothing says ‘celebrate diversity’ like forcing everyone to dress exactly the same,” he wrote in a National Post piece a few years ago.
Landolt agrees with Steyn, adding that schools are forcing children to conform to a sexual agenda that she called “disturbing.”
“It’s totally propaganda, and not telling the truth to children,” she
said. “It’s not diversity they’re promoting, but only homosexuality.”
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