Dear Father Jenkins

Month

April 2012

8 posts

Day 40- Notre Dame Faculty, Bishops, Leaders of Catholic Institutions

On February 21st, Notre Dame Law Professor O. Carter Snead, Professor Mary Ann Glendon of Harvard Law School, Princeton Professor Robert P. George, Yuval Levin of the Ethics and Public Policy Center, and John Garvey, president of the Catholic University of America drafted a document entitled “Unacceptable,” which has since been signed by over 60 Notre Dame Faculty members, Cardinal Dolan, Bishop Kevin C. Rhoades of the Diocese of Fort Wayne-South Bend, and a multitude of other Bishops and influential members of Catholic institutions nationwide. This letter, in succinct detail and direct language, protests the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services mandate that requires employers to cover abortion-inducing drugs, contraceptives, and sterilizations.

As we arrive at Holy Saturday, the final day before our Lord’s glorious Resurrection on Easter Sunday, we submit this bold statement as a letter to Father Jenkins and prayerfully request that he add his signature to its closing.

Father Jenkins, throughout Lent we have prayed for the strength and the grace necessary to proclaim the “good news” by standing athwart the bad. And, as the disciples rejoiced on the other side of these mysterious three days of the Triduum, encountering the Resurrected Christ and understanding, finally, the trial that had just taken place, may you also receive this same abiding peace as you encounter your unenviable mission.

Dear Father Jenkins,

The Obama administration has offered what it has styled as an “accommodation” for religious institutions in the dispute over the HHS mandate for coverage (without cost sharing) of abortion-inducing drugs, sterilization, and contraception. The administration will now require that all insurance plans cover (“cost free”) these same products and services. Once a religiously-affiliated (or believing individual) employer purchases insurance (as it must, by law), the insurance company will then contact the insured employees to advise them that the terms of the policy include coverage for these objectionable things.


This so-called “accommodation” changes nothing of moral substance and fails to remove the assault on religious liberty and the rights of conscience which gave rise to the controversy. It is certainly no compromise. The reason for the original bipartisan uproar was the administration’s insistence that religious employers, be they institutions or individuals, provide insurance that covered services they regard as gravely immoral and unjust. Under the new rule, the government still coerces religious institutions and individuals to purchase insurance policies that include the very same services.
It is no answer to respond that the religious employers are not “paying” for this aspect of the insurance coverage. For one thing, it is unrealistic to suggest that insurance companies will not pass the costs of these additional services on to the purchasers. More importantly, abortion-drugs, sterilizations, and contraceptives are a necessary feature of the policy purchased by the religious institution or believing individual. They will only be made available to those who are insured under such policy, by virtue of the terms of the policy.

It is morally obtuse for the administration to suggest (as it does) that this is a meaningful accommodation of religious liberty because the insurance company will be the one to inform the employee that she is entitled to the embryo-destroying “five day after pill” pursuant to the insurance contract purchased by the religious employer. It does not matter who explains the terms of the policy purchased by the religiously affiliated or observant employer. What matters is what services the policy covers.
The simple fact is that the Obama administration is compelling religious people and institutions who are employers to purchase a health insurance contract that provides abortion-inducing drugs, contraception, and sterilization. This is a grave violation of religious freedom and cannot stand. It is an insult to the intelligence of Catholics, Protestants, Eastern Orthodox Christians, Jews, Muslims, and other people of faith and conscience to imagine that they will accept an assault on their religious liberty if only it is covered up by a cheap accounting trick.


Finally, it bears noting that by sustaining the original narrow exemptions for churches, auxiliaries, and religious orders, the administration has effectively admitted that the new policy (like the old one) amounts to a grave infringement on religious liberty. The administration still fails to understand that institutions that employ and serve others of different or no faith are still engaged in a religious mission and, as such, enjoy the protections of the First Amendment.

For a list of signatures, visit this link: tracking.etapestry.com/t/22957125/762241506/54767834/0/

For the Irish Rover story on the “Unacceptable” letter, visit this link: http://wwww.irishrover.net/archives/1654

Apr 7, 2012
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Apr 6, 2012
Day 39- Concerned Catholic Voices - John Murphy, Kelli Steele Adams, Brenda A. Baietto, Charles Atkinson

Throughout Lent, we have received a number of letters from individuals who are connected to Notre Dame through friends or family, who are interested in sending their children to Our Lady’s University, or who, by virtue of their membership in the Body of Christ, are deeply concerned about the protection and fortification of the Catholic voice of our beloved alma mater. This Good Friday, the day on which our Savior’s great act of self-sacrificial love compels each of us to choose to identify ourselves with Him, we feature a sampling of voices that deeply value that identification.

Dear Father Jenkins,

I beg you to support the Catholic Bishops stand against the HHS regulation issued by the Obama administration.  It appears in the beginning you opposed the regulation and are now willing to accept the so called “appeasement” offered by the Obama administration.  The Catholic Bishops have rejected this appeasement.  I compare your silence on this appeasement to Neville Chamberlains support of the Munich Accord.  When will you and people like you learn that you have to stand up and be counted as a true Catholic, who is in accord with our Bishops.


I hope you read Francis Cardinal George’s message of February 26, 2012  (http://www.catholicnewworld.com/cnwonline/2012/0226/cardinal.aspx) regarding this matter.  Cardinal George states four (4) choices for Catholic institutions if the HHS regulations are not rescended.  What choice will Notre Dame chose?  I believe that the following quotes from Cardinal George’s article are excellent and apply to any action or lack of action you take on this matter.  “behavior doesn’t determine morality.”, “Trimming morality to how we behave guts the Gospel”, “There have always been those whose personal faith is not adequate to the faith of the church.”, “Bishops don’t claim to speak for every baptized Catholic. Bishops speak, rather, for the Catholic and apostolic faith. Those who hold the faith gather with them; others go their own way.  They are and should be free to do so, but they deceive themselves and others in calling their organizations Catholic.”  Also, Timothy Cardinal Dolan stated in an article in the Wall Street Journal, concerning the so called appeasement rule “The rule forces insurance companies to provide these services without a co-pay, suggesting they are “free” - but it is naive to believe that.  There is no free lunch, and you can be sure there’s no free abortion, sterlization or contraception.  Ther will be a source of funding: you.”

Is Notre Dame and it’s administrators deceiving themselves by calling Notre Dame a Catholic University when the President of the University remains silent on this very important issues?  I hope that you learn from history that appeasement of evil laws and regulations has never been a solution to any problem.

John C. Murphy

 ____________________________________________________________

Dear Fr. Jenkins,

I am a resident of Ave Maria, FL and I am just a regular person trying to live out my faith everyday.  Trying to show my love of God in my daily actions, my joy, my self-sacrifices, and my prayers.  I am not one to normally be political but I have been very concerned about the HHS Mandate.  I am troubled that our President, while trying to do what he believes is right, is forgetting that this country is based on a constitution that has protected the rights of religious people for hundreds of years.  I know that you know about the mandate.  I just want you to know that me and many of my friends here would be so pleased and honored if you took a stand against this mandate.  Think of the excellent example it would be to Catholics everywhere if the President of Notre Dame stood with the Bishops on this issue.  United we would be.  I pray that you will show unity with all Catholics and all other people in your support of our freedoms.

Sincerely,

Kelli Steele Adams

 ____________________________________________________________


Dear Father Jenkins:

I am not a student at Notre Dame nor an alumni.  I am a catholic.  As we are one body in Christ I appeal to you through the Body of Christ.  We are called to evangelize Jesus as Saviour and Lord.  I wish I did a better job of it every day but I try and reach out to Christ for the strength to not only proclaim Him but discern correctly how to do it.  Perhaps your heart is troubled and you are not certain how to proclaim Him in these most difficult times.  I ask you Father from my heart which belongs to Christ to your heart which belongs to Christ too - to seek Christ out and ask Him the best route for you to take with this issue.  I ask you to get up early in the morning - before dawn - as Christ did and go to the Father and pray for guidance.  Pray from the depths of your soul to the One who is Love and then trust in His will for you and the University for which you were entrusted in His Name.  

Thank you and the peace of Christ be with you.

Brenda A. Baietto

 ____________________________________________________________

Dear Father Jenkins,

As a recent convert in 2009, I was confused by the clamour over the University awarding President Obama an honorary degree. So I paid a great deal of attention to his speech. The President made a point to emphasize that he would never create policy that would force people to act contrary to their conscience.

President Obama has chosen to go back on his word with the HHS mandate. Will you stand with President Obama or remain silent on the issue?

Charles Atkinson

Apr 6, 2012
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Day 38- Cynthia Brenner '09

Dear Father Jenkins,

As an alumna of Notre Dame and a current grad student at Georgetown, the differences between the schools could not be more evident. Georgetown has announced that they will be following the HHS mandate, which does not shock me as the Catholic identity of the school is weak. But at Notre Dame, we do not hide our Catholic faith. We do not hand out condoms in student centers. And we do not reduce to our lowest common denominator. We are strong in our Catholic identity and now is the time to show it.

Before coming to Georgetown, I took for granted the strong presence of Catholic identity at Notre Dame. At ND, every classroom has a crucifix, every dorm a chapel, and mass on the quad is a regular, well-attended occurrence. In the past we have not been afraid to portray our faith; a government mandate is no reason to stop. 

The illegality and the unconstitutionality of the issue aside, it is time to put our faith into practice. We should not bend as other universities have; Catholic doctrine is clear and unwavering. Why aren’t we?

God, Country, Notre Dame,

Cynthia Brenner ‘09

To participate, please submit your letter to dearfrjenkins@gmail.com

Apr 5, 2012
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Day 37- Frank M. Guilfoyle '81

Dear Father Jenkins,

While I could probably write pages about my opinions regarding the outrageous HHS mandate, I would like to approach this from a different direction.  As an ‘81 Notre Dame graduate, I have longed for the time when my beloved University would be recognized as the de facto national and world leader in Catholic teaching.  Our Lady’s University should be a beacon of faithful Catholic higher education manifest with its fidelity to the Magesterium of the Catholic Church.

The different direction? Our second daughter is a Junior at Roanoke Catholic High School in Roanoke, VA.  All things equal, she has an incredibly strong interest in attending Notre Dame.  Our conversations with her regarding Notre Dame and whether or not it would be the best Catholic school for her have been somewhat awkward.  I simply can’t tell her it is the best Catholic college.  The tepid response of the University to the HHS mandate is just a current example of how Notre Dame is letting down our students, alumni and faithful Catholics around the world.  My daughter is an incredibly special young Catholic woman.  The discussion she and other students at her school are having regarding the current events surrounding the HHS and Catholic institutions is confusing to them.  Consequently, my wife and I are struggling in knowing how to give the best guidance and direction to our daughter. PLEASE help us and parents everywhere with staunch and faithful leadership.

Frank M. Guilfoyle ‘81

To participate, please submit your letter to dearfrjenkins@gmail.com

Apr 4, 20127 notes
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Day 36- Raquel Falk, ‘13

Dear Father Jenkins,

My name is Raquel Falk, and I am a junior in the Program of Liberal Studies. Since my first Great Books seminar during my freshman year at Notre Dame, I have been continually amazed by the history and development of western civilization. I now believe in the fact that everything we hold to be true about humanity is the product of a long tradition of thought (aside from Divine Revelation, of course – I’m a theology minor, as well).

The power of the human voice to shape history can be frightening.  Some thoughts, thoughts not grounded in love, have had a much greater impact on our world than others. How many important voices have we missed because they were censored or erased from human history? In my opinion, far too many. But the idea that the voices of the past shape our future can also be inspiring. It implies that each one of us has the potential to add our thoughts and opinions to the great conversation of life in the hope that we will all come closer to the Truth.

The Great Books have shown me the power one voice can carry. As the fight for religious liberty continues, please consider adding yours.

Respectfully,

Raquel Falk, ‘13

To participate, please submit your letter to dearfrjenkins@gmail.com

Apr 3, 2012
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Day 35- Denise Crowley Brenner '76

Dear Fr. Jenkins,

All around the perimeter of our campus are banners hanging from lampposts. These banners say, “Our Vision: To be a healing, unifying, enlightening force for a world deeply in need.”  Our world is in need of an enlightening force. Now is the time to speak out against the HHS Mandate regardless of the Supreme Court eventual decision.

The HHS Mandate clearly infringes on the separation of church and state. The University of Notre Dame and you, as its President, need to step up and be a guiding light in this period of darkness.  We cannot let the government dictate personal behavior and practices against our Catholic beliefs. Be bold, as Father Hesburgh was bold when he admitted me and other women to Notre Dame in 1972. The time is now to stand up and speak the truth. We need your voice as a beacon of Catholic mission and example.  We cannot equivocate or compromise on basic principles.

Here is my prayer for you during this difficult period:

Heal us from acquiescing to the demands of this secular society. Unite us in following the way of the Lord and His Mother. Enlighten us in the proper role of the Catholic Church in today’s world.

May the Holy Spirit give you guidance and direction to guard the Church, its beliefs and the practice of our religion without interference or dictate by government.

You are in my prayers.

Sincerely,

Denise Crowley Brenner, 1976

To participate, please submit your letter to dearfrjenkins@gmail.com

Apr 2, 2012
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Apr 1, 2012

March 2012

40 posts

Day 34- John Brown '56

Dear Fr. Jenkins, 

In this very brief note I encourage you to strongly protest President Obama’s administrations effort to force the HHS mandate upon any portion of the country. The defense of our constitution and the future of religious freedom are vital to the present and future of this country. We can not be deluded into believing the arguments that women’s rights are being violated if they do not receive free birth control and abortion pills.

John Brown ‘56       

To participate, please submit your letter to dearfrjenkins@gmail.com

Mar 31, 2012
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Day 33- Jerome H. Marcoullier '64

Dear Father Jenkins,

I am writing to make a request that others may have also made to you recently. I offer mine to point out the possibility that much good could come to you, Notre Dame, the Catholic church and our nation if you consent.

In his commencement speech to the Notre Dame class of 2009 President Obama said:

“Let’s honor the conscience of those who disagree with abortion, and draft a sensible conscience clause, and make sure that all of our healthcare policies are grounded in clear ethics and sound science as well as a respect for the equality of women.”

Admittedly this statement illustrates an appeal to moral relativism in that Obama is saying that “clear ethics” can exist in the consciences of both those who are for legal abortion and those who consider it the killing of a real person, but at least he is promising those who oppose legal abortion that the obligations of their consciences would be respected. Three years later he repudiated this promise and perhaps the promise itself was just a lie. This conflict is between the secular moral relativism held by President Obama and his supporters and the Catholic Church with her mission to authoritatively interpret the unchanging natural law. It has, by Obama’s health directive, been mobilized into a war that will have to be settled now. I believe this battle will be notably historic, and will change our world for better of worse. I pray the Church will triumph.

My request is that you publicly state that you regret inviting President Obama to the University of Notre Dame, that he does not deserve the honors given him there because his policies violates God given human rights. A majority of Catholics voted for Obama because they were misled by him. People will understand that you are acting honorably in admitting to a mistake and will respect your humility. Silence will leave you on the wrong side.

Respectfully,

Jerome H. Marcoullier

Notre Dame Class of 1964

To participate, please submit your letter to dearfrjenkins@gmail.com

Mar 30, 2012
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Day 32- Daniel J. Amiri '09

Dear Fr. Jenkins,

It was my faith that brought me to Notre Dame in the first place. In high school, while I discerned to what kind of life God might be calling me, I did determine that I would forgo a potentially lucrative career in aerospace engineering to pursue an education that seemed to me much more relevant to my apparent vocation: Theology and Philosophy.  And so I attended Notre Dame with the idea that I would receive the best education in Theology and Philosophy I could possibly manage. I challenged myself to take classes that were difficult, thought-provoking, and truly enlightening.  Because of the wealth of resources that Notre Dame offers, I was able to change my major in Philosophy to Classics, in which I learned to study the ancient minds in their own words. 

As a direct result of the process of being educated at Notre Dame, I grew in ways I still cannot comprehend. More valuable to me than gold, I became more the man God wants me to be. I became more “manly,” if you will, because it was my education at Notre Dame which taught me not to be afraid to stand up for what I believed. I know now that my faith is true and this is the foundation for everything I am and everything I do.  As a middle-child, I was nurtured to be a great compromiser and always found the truth in opposite positions.  But I refuse to compromise on my faith or the fruits thereof.  Notre Dame taught me this.

It was also because of my education that I refused to participate in my own Commencement. It was the year of my graduation that the University of Notre Dame, with a degree and central place in graduation proceedings, honored an unabashedly pro-choice President who promised you then that, even as he pursued his policies, there would always be reasonable compromises to be made with Catholic institutions. I participated instead in ND Response and was received by hundreds at the Grotto on the occasion of my commencement, which was a prayerful ceremony and the perfect conclusion to my life of faith at Notre Dame. At that time, I was commissioned in prayer to continue standing up for my faith. 

The sacrifice of not attending commencement at the Joyce Center was a small one compared to the many sacrifices I will have to make later in life.  But can it be true that my suffering will come primarily from the very same government that was founded, in part, to protect religious liberty?  I still believe the answer to that question is fundamentally no, but it is also my belief that no reasonable government would relegate freedom of religion to freedom of worship. It is still my belief that the government, in face of opposition, will pare down this most recent charge against faith. But it is only in the face of opposition, in reasonable minds speaking out for the truth, that the government will do so.

Respectfully, as Notre Dame challenged me, I must challenge you: Do you regret my education led me to be the man I am today? Would you have wished I learned differently, to have behaved differently?  Do I bring shame to the greatest Catholic university in the world?  You are a vicar of Catholic education, which works to perfect the mind, the soul, and the body.  Please stand with me to denounce this forceful intrusion into the life of the faithful. As a compromiser, which I firmly believe you are, you need not attack the President nor undermine his authority. You do not even have to say he is wrong-headed or ill-intentioned. But what you must say is that we believe our faith is true, that it is the right of Catholics to practice that faith, and that that right must be defended.

Notre Dame taught me never to compromise on the faith.  All I ask is that you do the same.

Most sincerely,

Daniel J Amiri, ‘09  

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Mar 29, 2012
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Day 31- Matt Rossano '93

Dear Father Jenkins,

I am praying today for you.   I pray that you are open to the Holy Spirit and for your wisdom and courage to discern God’s will.

Sincerely,

Matt Rossano
Class of 1993

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Mar 28, 2012
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Day 30- David Florenzo, '92

Dear Fr. Jenkins,

I respectfully urge you to join Cardinal Dolan, Notre Dame’s own Professor Carter Snead, and the many other Catholic and religious leaders in publicly rejecting the supposed accommodation presented by President Obama.  What we now know is that this administration is pushing to enact policies that violate our basic First Amendment rights as Catholics, that this administration is deliberately seeking to divide the Church, and that this administration is deliberately peddling in base, religious bigotry for its own political gain.

Now is the time for you to speak.  The longer you remain silent, the more difficult our struggle becomes, and the more likely it is that the HHS regulations will require that Catholic institutions support actions that are morally objectionable.

Regards,
David Florenzo, ‘92

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Mar 27, 2012
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Day 29- Michael Baruzzini '05

Dear Father Jenkins,

There is an old Jewish joke: two men are arguing and, unable to compromise, they ask the rabbi for a judgment. He listens carefully as the first man makes his case, and then pronounces, “You’re right.” “Wait,” the second man objects, “You haven’t heard my case.” The second man then goes on to explain his contrary side of the story, after which the rabbi tells him: “You’re right also.” The second man’s wife, listening to the debate, scratches her head and asks, “Rabbi, how can they both be right?” The rabbi nods wisely and says, “And you’re right too.”

Sycophancy requires only one point of view. True dialogue requires two. Thus far in the issue of the new HHS mandate forcing Catholic institutions to fund contraception, Notre Dame has refused serious dialogue, opting instead for parroting the lines of others – echoing the episcopacy’s concern when the bishops first raised objections, and echoing the administration when it offered its “compromise.” Merely trotting out the opinions of others, Notre Dame’s voice as a Catholic university, a center of Catholic thought and worldly engagement, has been silent. Notre Dame has not yet spoken. Notre Dame has only quietly mumbled half-hearted agreement with whomever happens to be the nearest listener.  In the event, Notre Dame’s leadership has been markedly absent, replaced only by what seems to be a craven attempt to not make anybody mad.

In her history as the premier Catholic university in America, Notre Dame was not known for Catholic parochialism or isolation. Rather, Notre Dame believed that the Catholic Church has something true to offer to the world, something good to propose, and something noble to be announced. Notre Dame has been in the past a beacon of principle and truth. That light has been dimmed. Under the guise of dialogue, Notre Dame has lost its voice altogether. Engagement requires standing on principle. The message from the University has not been one of graciousness and principle, but rather one of obfuscation. The Church has warned that the government’s position is unacceptable; Notre Dame said, “You’re right.” The government offered a glib compromise that did not address the problem, and Notre Dame said, “You’re right.” The students and alumni now say to the University: they can’t both be right. Please don’t reply that we’re right too. Please reply by engaging the world with integrity and with Catholic truth, and with the privileged leadership a great Catholic university is able to provide.

Christ said that his teaching would comfort the weary and rouse the hopeless to life. Christ warned too that his teaching would be a stumbling block that would rouse the opposition of princes. This tension has been present in the Church since the beginning, and is always a part of Catholic identity. It’s time for Notre Dame to again embrace that identity, and that tension too, and stand for the challenge of truth. It’s time to reclaim the principle that Catholic identity and practice is not determined by the dictates of governmental power, but by eternal moral truths entrusted to the Church and given to her greatest teachers to impart and uphold.

In Christ,

Michael Baruzzini ‘05

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Mar 26, 2012
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Mar 25, 2012
Day 28- Dr. Daniel Boland '56

My Dear Fr. Jenkins:

The Obama Administration seeks to eliminate the moral freedoms of our beloved Church and to facilitate the schism which tears the American Catholic community in two. Now we learn that the Obama Administration and the Health and Human Services Department demand that health plans must provide contraceptive and abortifacient drugs even to our students.

Catholics are now compelled to confront the crises Mr. Obama has ignited. As we respond, Catholics (unlike our enemies) must walk a cautious line between fact and emotion, fairness and excess, reasoned expression of principle and careless, rash judgment, moral tradition and secular expediency, the demands of Christian virtue and the crass, unprincipled tactics of radically secular politicians such as Mr. Obama.

Your prolonged silence in this matter — and in other instances — stands in stark contrast to the pro-abortion/anti-magisterial statements made by several Notre Dame faculty members. We who respect the University’s Catholic traditions are deeply concerned that the Obama intrusions, along with pro-abortion statements made by several Notre Dame faculty members, go unanswered by you and your Administration. Academic freedom is a valid consideration here, but it has proper limits. It properly permits a professor to speak within the recognized limits of her/his professional expertise. Academic freedom is not a license to attack an opponent at will. It is not allowance to make outrageous comments which strike the heart of the University’s Catholic principles. And it definitely does not preclude a response from you or your spokesperson. Yet outspoken pro-abortion Notre Dame faculty persons have time and again expressed their support for abortion and their disdain for the Magisterium without a single word from you or your Administration. Your customary silence offends the most liberal understanding of academic freedom and suggests your official indifference to blatant insults against the Church — but there is more which adds to our concern.

We also recall your firm opposition to the pro-life actions of the ND88 and your two-year support for the prosecution of these pro-life persons. We recall misleading comments made by University spokespersons in an attempt to exonerate other demonstrators. We recall your energetic defense of an appointee to the University’s Board of Trustees when her financial support for several pro-abortion agencies was discovered. We recall the swiftness with which you and Mr. Richard Notebaert, Chairman of the University Fellows officially defended this person, a defense which was not extended to the morally-admirable pro-life actions of the ND88.

We further recall your adulation of Mr. Obama when you awarded him an honorary Doctorate. We recall your recurring statement (inexplicably repeated several times over the past two years) that you would again grant Mr. Obama the same honor; this, despite what you now know of his aggressive pro-abortion, anti-Catholic behavior. Many people are caught in nagging wonderment why you would energetically defend — or, worse, openly celebrate  — pro-abortion politicians, spokespersons, lawmakers, faculty members and donors whilst hesitating for so long to speak with Catholics who defend the Church and the unborn (including those who defend the rights of embryonic stem cells).

There are times when moral principles are so clear that we must — we simply must — act as moral exemplars. Now is such a time.

There is a point beyond which even Charity no longer allows us to remain silent, tolerant or passive. Now is such a time.

There are times when Charity demands that we speak with conviction and without hesitation. Now is such a time.

When we are pushed beyond the margins of human law and the demands of divine law, then morality and reason require action, lest we gravely err by omission and avoidance. Indeed, reasonable tolerance and charitable restraint actually become destructive when those who know better still remain silent.

Many Catholic leaders, Notre Dame faculty and students, even Catholic teens across the country, openly speak in unison against the Obama Administration’s attempts to overwhelm and destroy the Magisterium of the Catholic Church. Your continued silence now reflects ungracious timidity, not timely commitment. Your hesitation says you are unwilling to exert the power and influence of your office as President of a great Catholic University. It is as if you deliberately resist the prophetic responsibility which your office as President of Notre Dame thrusts upon you.

With prayerful urgency, I call upon you one last time:  wait no longer. Come forward. Now is the appointed time.

Daniel M. Boland, PhD’56


This letter is a truncated version of the original. To obtain the full text, please email: bolandparke@sbcglobal.net

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Mar 24, 2012
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Day 27 - James P. Kane '84

Dear Father Jenkins:

“Never do anything against conscience even if the state demands it.”

-Albert Einstein

Once again I write to you to recognize this President for his actions not his words.  He has masterfully lulled our relgious leaders into the false belief that he shares the sacred value of religious freedom.  With my fellow alumni I urge you to stand and be heard on the assault on our Catholic faith.  This adminsitration has shown by its actions that there is no dialogue, only lip service to the concerns of true believers.

If we truly mean our chant that “We are ND” then join the chorus of voices in outrage over this overt attack on the Catholic faith steeped in political motives.  Refuse to comply with government mandates that force violations of conscience.  Do not miss this opportunity to be our voice!

Respectfully,

James P Kane ‘84

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Mar 23, 2012
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Day 26- Clifton J. Roberts '11

Dear Father Jenkins,

I write to you as a proud member of the University of Notre Dame Class of 2011, as a Catholic, as an American, and as someone who has often been forced to defend the University of Notre Dame against verbal attacks from many different fronts.  One such attack has been directed against you, specifically regarding your decision to allow President Obama to speak at the 2009 graduation ceremony and to confer an honorary degree upon him.  I have defended you from this attack because I believe you had good reasons for allowing these events to happen, even if I didn’t necessarily agree with the decision.  Your speech at that graduation ceremony showed me that you were honoring the office of the Presidency, Barack Obama’s achievement of being elected as the first black President of the United States (which should not be underestimated), and encouraging an “open dialogue” with those who hold different views and ideas than our own.

However, I can no longer in good conscience defend your actions, or lack thereof. The time for “open dialogue” has past, as it has become painfully clear that President Obama has no desire to talk.  President Obama is taking swift action, and it is time that Notre Dame does the same.  Other universities are fighting this mandate much more actively than Notre Dame has thus far, and quite frankly, they are fighting a losing battle. None of these institutions possess the resources nor the influence that Notre Dame possesses, and without Notre Dame (and other prestigious schools like it), their voices will inevitably fail.  This must not happen.  This mandate must be overturned, and not simply because contraception is contrary to Church teaching. This mandate must be overturned because it sets a very dangerous precedent for the role of government in this county, a precedent that the President clearly intends to pursue.  The goal of this mandate is to make religious institutions (such as religiously affiliated schools, hospitals, and charities) conform to secular ideologies as dictated by the government or, better yet in the President’s mind, to close these institutions all together to leave only public institutions that the government can control. 

How can the President justify saying that contraception is a necessary part of health care?  Contraception is not a medication.  Contraception is a lifestyle choice that, while you and I disagree with the choice, everyone is free to make if they so desire.  However, NO institution can be forced to provide for whatever lifestyle its employees choose to lead.  I believe this mandate is wrong not only because I am a Catholic; I believe this mandate is wrong because I am an American.  Every American should be up in arms about this, not just Catholics or others who believe that human life is a gift and not something that should be actively prevented.  Whoever believes in freedom should be standing against this mandate, and doing so with unshakable resolve.

God bless you as you discern the proper path to take from here. 

Respectfully yours,

Clifton J. Roberts ‘11

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Mar 22, 2012
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Mar 21, 2012
Day 25- Karen Cavanaugh '05

“I am only one, but I am one. I cannot do everything, but I can do something. What I can do, I ought to do, and what I ought to do, by the grace of God, I will do.”

- Dr. Thomas A. Dooley ‘48

Notre Dame, our Mother, was only one. Tom Dooley was only one. You, Fr. Jenkins, are only one. But, nothing is impossible with God. Please, do what you can do, what you ought to do. Speak out against the HHS mandate and defend the religious and moral freedom of our nation.

May God bless you abundantly,

Karen Cavanaugh ‘05

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Mar 21, 2012
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Day 24- Dave Hoppe '73

Father Jenkins:

I am writing to urge you to take the lead in the effort to get President Obama and his administration to recognize the fundamental right to act within the dictates of one’s conscience on matters of faith and morals.

The assault on the first amendment rights of Catholics (not to mention others who may be of different faiths but share our view of the immutable right of religious and moral conscience) by President Obama is a planned attack on the Catholic church and political gamesmanship to appeal to liberal women who are a critical part of his base in this reelection effort.

Since President Obama focused on the right to conscience and his respect for those rights in his graduation address at Notre Dame, you have a special place and a singular platform to respond to the President’s action. Saying that he wants to further negotiate how Catholics can be forced to live with this new regulation is the oldest political dodge in the game. But even if he is serious, for any negotiation to be successful, there needs to be one of the parties who are pressing for change to take a lead position. Father, you have the best opportunity of anyone in the America to take the lead. President Obama used the University to further his own ends and now the University must respond to this political attack from President Obama.

Thank you for your time and consideration.

Dave Hoppe ‘73

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Mar 20, 2012
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“I think that we should be men first, and subjects afterward. It is not so desirable to cultivate a respect for the law, so much as for the right.” —~Henry David Thoreau, Civil Disobedience, 1849
Mar 19, 2012
Day 23- Anne Brusky '07, '09

Dear Father Jenkins,­

As a Catholic high school teacher who graduated from both Notre Dame and Notre Dame’s Alliance for Catholic Education, I strive every day to “practice what I preach.”  When I see hundreds of impressionable teenagers looking to my twenty-something self for an example and an opinion, I feel the responsibility of upholding my faith weighing on my heart and pulling it to higher ends.  Both in and out of the classroom, I strive to embrace the Church’s teachings, and I am grateful to live in a country that grants me the freedom to follow my conscience, even when the path on which it leads me may seem countercultural to most. 

Recently, however, my gratitude for and confidence in our great country was shaken a bit with President Obama’s health care mandate on contraception that includes abortifacients.  Last week my AP students read Henry David Thoreau’s “On the Duty of Civil Disobedience,” and we discussed what we, as Catholics, need to do to stay true to our consciences regarding Obama’s proposal.  While many of my students argued that going to jail (Thoreau’s idea) over something like birth control seems extreme, they and I both saw the need for the Catholic Church to take action lest we lose the freedom to act according to our consciences at all. 

I was ambivalent when President Obama spoke at Notre Dame’s graduation and received an honorary degree, for I hoped and believed what he and you said would be true – that the invitation might open up the doors of communication between the pro-choice president and the Catholic university that I hold so dear.  With your eloquent words, you seemingly forged a relationship of mutual respect with Mr. Obama.  Now that Mr. Obama seems to have lost some respect for the faith-filled institutions that have enhanced our country with schools and hospitals and charities, I hope that you find it within yourself to use your influence for the greater good.  Help enable us, your fellow Catholics, to act in line with our consciences and our faith without fear of punishment.  The students I teach need strong Catholic role models, and, for that matter, so do the rest of us.  If the Church is our ark amidst the “chopping sea of civilized life” that Thoreau describes, I firmly believe we need Notre Dame to act as the iron frame that helps hold us all together.

Thank you for leading us in this matter.

In Christ,

Anne Brusky ’07, ‘09

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Mar 19, 2012
Mar 18, 2012
Day 22- William Schultheis '52

Dear Fr. Jenkins,

For some time now, as a graduate of Notre Dame, I have been very concerned for the school of Our Lady that we alumni hold very dear in our hearts. Earlier, I opposed your having invited President Obama to speak at Graduation because of the positions he had outwardly taken in opposition to several of our Catholic tenets and beliefs.  It was especially disturbing to me, also, that you so quickly did this after his inauguration and before he could be fully judged and vetted by his actions in Office.  I was also disheartened in this same regard that you were silent and did not speak openly in support of the “group of eight” and their Constitutional right to free speech when having earlier condoned similar actions by a gay rights group.  As time has passed under your leadership, it is becoming more and more apparent that although you may have believed what you said when accepting the Presidency (that you “would work to make Notre Dame the best and most Catholic University in the Country”), your actions or lack of them have now left us alumni wondering just what it is that is holding you back from making your promise a reality.  

Your letter to Secretary Sibelius regarding the so-called health ‘benefit’ mandates was strong and forthright and cheered by us alumni.  While you did what was demanded of your position in speaking for the school against these forced affronts to our Catholic faith, one of your employees, Gary Gutting, took it upon himself to use bogus polls to ‘reinterpret’ our founded Catholic beliefs through, of all anti-Catholic publications, the New York Times.  Your moment “in the sun”, Fr. Jenkins, is now before you as to how you will proceed from this point on.  Will you stand strong and lead an effort to make the teachings of Our Lady’s Son paramount and more manifest at Notre Dame, and pull the University back from the secular slide that has been occurring there in recent years, or will you allow those that speak behind your back to newspapers et al to continue to espouse their distorted views of who we as Catholics really are?  And will you sign onto and support the letter that Carter Snead of your ND Law School wrote in opposition to President Obama’s “accommodation” approach, and which many members of this school attached their names to, as well as a number of prominent Catholic leaders across America?  Tough decisions for you to make because of the potential ramifications and unrest amongst some in your inner circle and beyond, but all the more necessary that you do the ‘right thing’.  You, Fr. Jenkins, are who you are: the Catholic president of our Catholic University.  

We alumni support you, but without any strong and forthright action on your part we are afraid to think what Notre Dame University will be like five or ten years from now.  Please, think along with us and listen to our call.

Sincerely,

William J. Schultheis, ‘52

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Mar 17, 2012
Day 21- Bella Katrina Johnson, SMC '87

Dear Fr. Jenkins,

My husband went to the University of Notre Dame and I was a philosophy major at Saint Mary’s (both ‘87 graduates).  We were married at Sacred Heart Church on campus and we always thought that our alma maters would stand up for Catholic values and be a beacon of faith.  We are now in a time when the silence of Catholic leaders can be deafening.

 Many well-intentioned, yet naive Catholics thought that President Obama would uphold the separation of powers and 1st amendment, thus a national health care bill would not become a means for the executive branch to seize power and dictate what is “good” for each American.  Now the Catholic Church is being mandated by the Department of Health and Human Services and the President to pay premiums to health insurance companies which will pay for contraception and abortifacients with no co-pay.  In essence, we prepay for contraceptives and abortifacients, so that they are “free” to those who want them.   

 Catholic bishops have rightly said that the government is imposing a needless mandate that reveals a threat to religious liberty.  In fact, women are already free to purchase readily available birth control if they want to, and the Catholic Church is not imposing its own values.  However the effort to push secular values upon people of faith seems to indicate that being an American citizen would require giving up faith and moral reasoning and blindly following what the government dictates.  With their newly usurped power and in order to save money for the “greater good,” the government can potentially support abortion, euthanasia and the institutionalizing of special needs groups.  Mandating free contraception is just the start.

 I hope that more Catholics can see the imminent threat posed by giving our liberty over to a large corruptible government, and although the big issue for the country is an overstepping of executive power, the issue for Catholic parents is relying on the Church to uphold values.  As a mother of a fifteen year-old girl, I see that my daughter can easily be exposed to promiscuity and pornography in this age of easily accessed information, and it is difficult to raise a holy family.  The fiasco with Georgetown University brings even more pressure upon young adults to use contraception.  I spoke to my daughter while driving her to Catholic high school today, explaining to her that the Catholic Church cannot advocate “free” contraception, because we are pro-life and pro-family.   A commitment in the Sacrament of Marriage means that two people accept and respect one another as subjects, who are both body and soul (isn’t this truly being pro-woman and pro-person?).  Furthermore, God’s grace makes the couple one on their journey, and having been married for almost 25 years now, I know that we have humbly needed grace and forgiveness.  In a marriage, a sexual relationship is fulfilling and children are a blessing, whereas the traps of promiscuity and pornography are obsessive, unhealthy, addictive, reducing human beings to narcissists and objects, the opposite of the kind of love that Christ brought into this world.  I hope that the Notre Dame and Saint Mary’s community will support the efforts of Catholic parents to teach their children about living holy lives.  Even though many of us Catholics stumble on our journeys, we look to the Church for guidance and hope for future generations.  I urge you to have a strong voice in opposition to this mandate, giving leadership and hope to people of faith.

Respectfully,

Bella Katrina Johnson  SMC ‘87


Written in honor of my parents, Drs. Felino and Bella Barnes, pro-life pediatricians who past away in ‘07 and ‘08.

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Mar 16, 2012
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Day 20- Christina Grace Dehan, '05, '07

Dear Fr. Jenkins,

During my time as an undergraduate and graduate student at Notre Dame, it was clear to me that one of the most pressing questions for you as you began your tenure as president of Our Lady’s University was “What does it mean to be an authentically Catholic university?” That is, how could Notre Dame be both a “sign of contradiction” in a world where the darkness often seems as if it is overcoming the light and a rigorous research university, able to hold its own in an increasingly competitive academy? I admired your willingness to take this question and its corollaries seriously, to bring them to prayer and study, and to risk unpopularity in doing so.

As a woman and one of the original co-founders (along with Anamaria Scaperlanda-Ruiz, ‘07) of the Edith Stein Project, I particularly appreciated your courageous and important decision to remove the Vagina Monologues, a play clearly in conflict with the Catholic understanding of the dignity of the human person, from campus. In so doing, you made it clear that fidelity to Christ and his Church  takes precedence over the tide of popular opinion.

In light of the HHS mandate, President Obama’s “accommodation” notwithstanding, the Notre Dame family needs you to make that fidelity clear once again. We need you to be strong where others are weak. We need you to speak the truth to power and let President Obama and the HHS know exactly where this country’s most prestigious Catholic university stands on matters of religious liberty. We need you to refuse to compromise Notre Dame’s Catholic character for the sake of complying with an unjust and unconstitutional law. We need you to be unafraid of the backlash that will follow, as it always does, when anyone dares to question the common mentality in our culture. We need you be bold in your adherence to the Truth, like the Apostles who preached the Gospel at the risk of their very lives, trusting that  “it will not be you who are speaking but the holy Spirit” (Mark 13:11). Ultimately, what need have any of us to fear from trouble in this world, if only we have Christ?

My prayer for you, Fr. Jenkins, is the same that I pray for our Church during this tumultuous time: that we would not be afraid to be uncompromising in safeguarding that which we hold most dear, that we would not be afraid to embrace the Cross, and that we would not be afraid to love Christ enough to die with him.             

In Notre Dame,
Christina Grace Dehan, ‘05, ‘07

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Mar 15, 2012
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“I have argued that Christians’ first political responsibility is to be the church, and by being the church they should understand that their first political loyalty is to God, and the God we worship as Christians, in a manner that understands that we are not first and foremost about making democracy work, but about the truthful worship of the true God.” —Stanley Hauwerwas, Performing the Faith: Bonhoeffer and the Practice of Nonviolence
Mar 14, 2012
Day 19- Daniel M. Boland, PhD '56

Fr. Jenkins:
 
As a loyal but deeply concerned alumnus of the Class of 1956, I urge you with all kindly encouragement to speak out — along with countless other influentially-situated Catholic personages — against the government’s present attempts to deprive the Catholic Church of its Constitutional right to legal protections and, indeed, to snatch from the Church its God-given right to self-definition.
 
It is high time that you step up and add your unqualified public support to the rising of the Church Militant in our time.
 
With all the alacrity and energy at your disposal, it is critical that you make it clear the University of Notre Dame and the leadership of the Congregation of Holy Cross at the University are in complete accord with the statements of over 180 Catholic Bishops, with an array of Catholic institutions and organizations and, in fact, with a number of our own faculty who have signed the statement written by Carter Snead.
 
As Priest-President of our University, any further delay on your part casts a shadow over Notre Dame which only you can remove. Please step up and be forthrightly heard. Your further silence now becomes an intolerable wonderment to all Catholics and adds further credence to the impression that you actually support to the Obama anti-Catholic agenda.
 
With respect, I urge you to kindly — and quickly — make yourself heard in favor of the position outlined by Cardinal Dolan.
 
May God encourage us all of us through the leadership example and courage of his clergy. May the Church be well-led and well-served by the actions of His ministers and His faithful laity …… and may God protect these United States.
 
Daniel M. Boland, PhD
Class of 1956

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Mar 14, 2012
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Day 18- Joe Lindsley '05

Dear Father Jenkins,
 
The University of Notre Dame talks a great game. The promotional spots it airs on NBC during football games gush with pride over students and professors who fight for all sorts of noble—and uncontroversial—causes.
 
But when faced with the chance to fight for less popular truths, will you enter the ring or watch from under the grandstands?
 
President Obama’s administration has picked a fight with the Church, mandating that all Catholic employers, from major CEOs to small business owners, violate their faith by paying for something the Church says is gravely wrong.
 
An institution that deems itself “the place where the Church does its thinking” need not be naïve when it comes to politics. Consider this: If the federal government can mandate contraceptive and abortifacient coverage now, what will prevent it from mandating employers to pay for all abortions—and who knows what else—once President Obama doesn’t have to worry about reelection? 
 
The University has been focused on gaining influence in secular circles, but there is an urgent need for some diversity in our public discourse: an authentic Catholic voice. Why not speak as forcefully about this egregious violation of religious freedom as you do about more worldly topics like sustainability? You could set an inspiring example.
 
Notre Dame’s campus, especially the cemetery on the bluff above St. Mary’s Lake, is full of reminders of those who devoted their lives to promoting the truth of Christ. How much is it to ask for their successors to publicly defend the Christian faith?
 
The narrator of your NBC commercials boldly says to millions of football fans, “The University of Notre Dame asks ‘What would you fight for?’”

I ask you:  What would—what will—you fight for?

Vita, Dulcedo, Spes
 
God bless,
 
Joe Lindsley
Sorin College, Notre Dame, 2005

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Mar 13, 2012
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“The service of God is not a dishonor to any office.” —– St Thomas More in A Man for All Seasons
Mar 12, 2012
Day 17- David H. Brenner '73

Dear Father Jenkins,

No one has any doubt that the University’s official response to President Obama’s recent “accommodation” will have significant impact on the national debate; in fact, some will certainly argue that the Notre Dame position will have a disproportionate impact given its national reputation and active alumni base.  Articulating that response just right is a huge challenge, but, as you correctly pointed out in your inaugural address, Notre Dame has thrived on challenge, so we must take full advantage of this opportunity. We must send a clear message about the conviction and consistency of this University on the central issue of separation of Church and State, and our total rejection of any governmental intrusion into matters of faith, to this and future administrations.  President Obama clearly wants to splinter the “Catholic” voice (and vote) with his “accommodation’, but we simply can’t rise to the bait.  He knows it won’t stand up to an eventual Supreme Court review, but rather seeks to exploit a short-term political advantage this year if he can.

As others have already pointed out to you, the White House position does not reflect a genuine dialogue with Church leaders, such as Cardinal Timothy Dolan of New York, but rather promotes a sampling of seemingly “progressive” Catholic outliers who are willing to trade-off basic tenets of our faith and teaching for what they deem as a “woman’s right”.  As a ND alum whose entire family, spouse and three children including two daughters, attended Notre Dame, I find these advocates’ behavior disgraceful and sinful, which they can explain to our Lord and His Mother.

Please rest assured that the Notre Dame family stands ready to support an unequivocal statement about our faith.  Notre Dame holds a unique position in this country, and we must clearly demonstrate adherence to our faith in words and action. Personally, I prefer blunt language to ensure the Administration hears the message clearly, but I trust you will craft a more polite, but equally clear articulation of where this University has stood on matters of faith since its founding, and continues to stand today. At the same time we must actively resist the anticipated public pushback to cede some ground as a “compromise”.  The application of our faith in our lives is non-negotiable.

I will light a candle for you at the Grotto as you prepare the official University response.

Sincerely,

David H. Brenner ‘73

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Mar 12, 2012
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Mar 11, 2012
Day 16- Commander Richard M. Very, Jr., SC, USNR (Ret) '81

Dear Father Jenkins, 

I am a 1981 graduate of Notre Dame and strongly believe in our freedom to practice our religion and in the sanctity of life. 

As President of the University and a public figure who is viewed as supporting President Obama’s presidency, I ask that you lead our university in taking action against the unjust HHS mandate imposed by President Obama and our government and publically proclaim the Catholic mission of Notre Dame.

Commander Richard M. Very, Jr., SC, USNR (Ret) ‘81

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Mar 10, 2012
“Civil disobedience becomes a sacred duty when the state has become lawless or corrupt… There is only one sovereign remedy, namely, nonviolent non-cooperation.” — Mohandas K. Gandhi
Mar 9, 2012
Day 15- Dr. Daniel Kempton '82

Dear Fr. Jenkins,

As a proud alumnus of the University of Notre Dame, I have always viewed the university as a great institution, which has historically led the way on numerous Catholic issues.  Generations of Notre Dame administrators, students and alumni have embraced with great fidelity, the tradition of our faith.  We should not sell short their legacy and commitment.  They have courageously fought for the poor, for the persecuted, and for racial equality.  They have defended Church teaching.  Unfortunately, I fear that in recent years the University sometimes has placed its worldly status and financial success above the principles for which Catholic universities, and the Church of which it is a part, generally stand.  The HHS mandate, even the alleged accommodation, represents a grave threat to both Catholic teaching, and American religious liberty.  Thus like the civil rights battle in the 1960s, it is a fundamental issue of liberty.  It is also the kind of issue on which Notre Dame historically has played a significant role, and often has been a leader among Catholic universities.  I am proud that I now serve as a professor and academic administrator at Franciscan University of Steubenville, an academically excellent and passionately Catholic school.  I have no doubt that Franciscan University will stand shoulder to shoulder with the bishops of our great country, in defense of the teaching of the Church and in support of our fundamental religious liberties.  Personally, I respectfully request that the University of Notre Dame stands beside us.  It will leave a stain on the reputation of my alma mater if she decides to place secular fame over religious freedom and a joint defense of the teaching of the Church.   Please join us in fighting this grave threat.  The Fighting Irish ought to be descriptive both of our performance on the athletic fields, and our defense of the Church.

In prayer,

Daniel R. Kempton, Ph.D.

Vice President for Academic Affairs &

Professor of Political Science

Franciscan University of Steubenville

(B.A., ND, 1982)

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Mar 9, 2012
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Day 14- Shannon Tapia '06

Dear Fr. Jenkins,

My name is Shannon Tapia.  I graduated from Notre Dame in 2006 as Shannon Murphy.  Today I am in my 2nd year of my family medicine residency.  It is because of Notre Dame’s essential role in women’s rights that I am writing, as a woman, a Catholic, a doctor, a mother, and a constituent of the Notre Dame family to urge you to take a bold and vocal stand against the HHS mandate.

The HHS mandate presents contraception as an essential preventive medicine in women’s healthcare.  Medically, the definition of preventive care is “a pattern of nursing and medical care that focuses on disease prevention and health maintenance. It includes early diagnosis of disease, discovery and identification of people at risk of development of specific problems, counseling, and other necessary intervention to avert a health problem.”  The government wants women to think that contraception is “preventive medicine.”  Pregnancy, whether teen, out of wedlock, or otherwise, is not a disease.  Furthermore, contraception is one of the only modern medicines that seeks to destroy normal physiology.  Most medicine is designed to assist the body in returning to normal physiology and to halt an aberrant biological process.  It is false and deceptive that we label this as preventive. 

Secondly, and more importantly, by making contraception fall within the realm of covered preventive medicine by governmental policy we are sending the wrong message to women regarding their true freedom of choice.  Through medical practice caring for women of child bearing age who are interested in contraceptives as a means of avoiding pregnancy, in particular teenage girls and the generally underserved, I have had unique insight into the psychological, emotional, and physiological effects of the ease of access and widespread acceptance of medical contraceptives.  Many women, especially teenage girls, see sexual relations as an obligation or prerequisite for affection, acceptance, and love by the male in their life, who is presented as a central factor in determining their self worth.  The emphasis on a contraceptive culture has diminished, if not eliminated in some cases, the ability of these young women to maintain autonomy and independence in their decision to have or not to have sexual relations.  We have sold them a lie that sex has no consequences, either physically or emotionally, and in labeling contraceptives preventive medicine we go even further to entrench the deception that contracepting is something women are expected to do, regardless of their personal preference.  The HHS bill even goes so far as to mandate full contraceptive coverage by insurance.  However, removing the financial responsibility of contraceptives does not solve a problem, as the debt is substituted with emotional and physical payments that are much more costly.

We owe it to women coerced into contraception (incidentally, those with the highest rate of teen pregnancy) to help them understand that their choice starts with loving themselves and recognizing their own self worth.  We owe it to these women not to capitulate to the insidious deception that contraception is another step in transition to womanhood and a form of preventive healthcare.  We must hold the men, and boys, in society to a higher standard.  The sanctity of life and impingement on freedom of conscience are worthy reasons alone to oppose the HHS mandate, but these polarizing debates frequently shift focus away the real question of whether contraception has done women any good.  It has not.  It is already easy to get, frequently for free on Medicaid plans which we all pay for in taxes.  There should be no governmental mandate that everyone in society needs to pay further for this ill.

Fr. Jenkins, thank you for defending woman by opposing the HHS plan and the contraceptive movement that causes so much harm.

With Reverence,

Shannon Murphy Tapia MD, Notre Dame ‘06

Lancaster General Hospital Family Medicine.

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Mar 8, 2012
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“As we must account for every idle word, so must we account for every idle silence.” —Benjamin Franklin
Mar 7, 2012
Day 13- Eileen Hassett '11

Dear Father Jenkins,

I graduated from Notre Dame last May. I had an experience at Notre Dame that was rich within all areas: spiritual, athletic, social and academic. My time at Our Lady’s University was the best and sometimes toughest time in my life. The ‘culture of life’ that is cultivated by the students, professors, and administration of the University is unlike anything I have ever experienced. However, secularism is now undermining this culture of selflessness, hard work, and love.

I have been very concerned about the steps that the Obama administration is taking against religion. This last attack of the HHS mandate, even with the accommodations being made, is allowing big government to push out religion institutions. This must stop. I urge you to continue to work in respect with the White House, but take a firm stance to preserve liberty. Be firm and radical with a stance of Love.

The opposite of love is not hate - it’s apathy. This nation sometimes seems to be drowning in apathy, but there are those who are looking to join a stance against evil, against apathy. We must respect and love our enemies, but we also must take action, as a community and as individuals. You have the power and status to spread truth and love through a movement. Indeed, it is a hard stance to be persecuted by all around you, but such a blessing to have a chance to stand up for God’s teachings.

Please, take the hard stance to be a leader, to not only work with the White House, but to lead a movement of all religious faiths to take back our conscience. We can all take strength in these words of Reverend Martin Luther King Jr. at this time of trials:

“Never, never be afraid to do what’s right, especially if the well-being of a person or animal is at stake. Society’s punishments are small compared to the wounds we inflict on our soul when we look the other way.” —Martin Luther King Jr.

This is a stance for our very souls. Besides the obvious denial of conscience that this mandate supports, this is a terrifying slippery slope that would warp our Constitution, our right to practice religion, and the culture of life and honor. Have faith and courage in the Lord. Let us be the golden city on a hill, and the light in the darkness. We must all take a stance where we may be struck down and humiliated. But when we all stand together, we will succeed. God give us the courage to do what is right.

“Silence in the face of evil is itself evil: God will not hold us guiltless. Not to speak is to speak. Not to act is to act.” —Dietrich Bonhoeffer

Your daughter, your sister, your friend,

Eileen Hassett ‘11


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Mar 7, 2012
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“Can there not be a government in which majorities do not virtually decide right and wrong, but conscience? Must the citizen ever for a moment, or in the least degree, resign his conscience to the legislator? Why has every man a conscience, then? I think that we should be men first, and subjects afterward.” — from Henry David Thoreau’s Civil Disobedience
Mar 6, 2012
Day 12- John Paul Slonkosky '06

Dear Fr. Jenkins,

I love Notre Dame.  It is a deep love, and so I have experienced much joy while also enduring great sorrow and pain.  In the past 6 years since graduation, my naiveté about her being a perfect place has changed into a hope for her to be a true and beautiful force for good in the world, in spite of her imperfections.  I see God’s mercy in His ability to use Notre Dame as His imperfect instrument.

I wish I could write now a letter praising her and all the good she has done and is doing.  But, circumstances in our country have forced her and you, as head of the university, to a point of action.  The greatest praise I can offer is to fight for her.  There is a profound mystery present, and you may be tempted to ask why Notre Dame, why you, why now?  I will not presume to offer an answer.  I raise the questions simply to state that I hope you will think first of God, then our country, and then Notre Dame.

The truth of authentic freedom—both religious and personal—has been attacked through this unjust HHS mandate.   For me it is as brazen as a slap in the face, and act of domination meant to submit citizens and the Church to secular power.  For others, it is being called an accommodation, beneficence from an understanding administration.  Whether it is outright attack or subtleties of sophistry, we need to stand and oppose it.  You are given the burden to stand and defend against this attack.  Notre Dame cannot remain silent; the country looks to her for guidance.

I join my classmates with sincere prayers for you and your decision to act.  We pledge to always serve God, our country, and Notre Dame.  Lead us.

Sincerely,

John Paul Slonkosky ‘06

To participate, please submit your letter to dearfrjenkins@gmail.com

Mar 6, 2012
#Day 12 #John Paul Slonkosky #Dear Father Jenkins #Father Jenkins #HHS Mandate #Contraception #Notre Dame #religious freedom #Religious Liberty
Day 11- Jocelyn Popit '05, '07

Dear Fr. Jenkins,

 My freshmen roommates in McGlinn Hall were quick to recognize my overuse of saying, “On one hand,” only to soon fill in with recognition of the counter argument by adding, “but on the other hand…”  Frequently, I feel the need to acknowledge my understanding of other pieces that may have the potential to fit into the puzzle; I have reasons for believing my opinion or perspective to be correct, and at the same time I want others to feel validated in the expression of their own opinions.  I want to maintain an open dialogue in order to work towards both sides’ realization of the correct answer.

I am not a moral theologian, nor am I a constitutional expert.  I know enough about both to acknowledge that they are complex.  I am Catholic.  I care about religious freedom, and I want to appropriately respond to the HHS mandate. 

Father Jenkins, my fellow Domers have written  letters explaining why you must represent the strong voice of those who are deeply concerned by the HHS mandate and the “accommodation” proposed by President Obama.  I’ve enjoyed reading these letters and I feel like each of their writers has a great deal to contribute.  I feel proud of the fact that I can include myself among them as one who can refer to Our Lady’s University as home and to its community as family.

Today, I add my voice to theirs.  I come to you as a Catholic school educator, a mother, and a wife to a full-time law student.  I have a lot on my plate and not enough hours in the day to take care of everything.  My attempts to stay well-informed are usually through the blogs that I read in the evenings before I go to bed; that is, when I’m not falling asleep with the current novel my English classes are reading half-open on my pillow.  I do the best I can to stay current, but I know I fall short.   

I share this with you because though each day I feel like my life stretches me to my limits, I know that many people would say that they feel the same way.  I have to believe, then, that my feelings of inadequacy at my level of understanding and response to this issue are shared with others in similar positions.

Based on experience, when I have been in a position of insecurity, I have looked to those I trust to guide me.  I might easily turn to the USCCB, Bishop Rice, Archbishop Carlson, or my own parish pastor to hear the authoritative voice of the Church, guided by the Holy Spirit.

As a graduate of the University of Notre Dame, I turn to you as well.  Over the course of my six years under the Dome, I grew to love Our Lady’s University and to trust the guidance of the people with whom it is associated.  As a member of the Notre Dame family, I look to those from the University as one family member will look to her relatives for direction and support.

Fr. Jenkins, I do not mean to advise you without acknowledging the unique position you are in as President of such a prestigious Catholic university as Notre Dame.  I can only imagine the conflicting tensions of the responsibilities that accompany your office.  Your position is one that I do not envy. Yet the reality is that you are the one in the spotlight, and we need you to stand up.  

Fr. Jenkins, I look to you, as an authoritative voice guided by the Church’s teachings and as a member of my Notre Dame family, to guide me and help me.  Please raise your voice and defend our faith. 

I will keep you in my prayers.

Sincerely,

Jocelyn Popit ‘05 & ‘07

To participate, please submit your letter to dearfrjenkins@gmail.com

Mar 5, 2012
#Dear Father Jenkins #Father Jenkins #jocelyn popit #HHS Mandate #Notre Dame
Mar 4, 2012
Day 10- J. Krafft, MBA '96

Dear Fr. Jenkins,

Americans are being bullied by Big Brother - and ever so more evident in the Obama administrations ‘contraceptive’ policy.  Let’s not split hairs here:

  • Life is not possible without an egg and a sperm - it is conjecture as to the definition of ‘life’, when a fetus becomes a ‘person’, and TOTALLY arbitrary as to when the life of an unborn child may be taken away
  • Abortion is NOT contraception
  • Isn’t physical purity worth more than a lifetime of guilt and shame that accompanies abortion?  America is not sending this message to future generations when it passes (let alone considers) this type of legislation

Obama is making this a Personal Rights issue…he’s pandering to 51% of US voters.   If this passes, our liberties are at stake…and it’s a steep, slippery slope to 1984.  

“All Saints have a Past, All Sinners have a Future”

We are all sinners…but that’s the beauty of being a Christian - God knows and acknowledges it, many of us realize it…but how do we cope? 

It’s what you do with every breath that counts.

    The Past:  cannot be changed

    The Future: uncertain

    The Present: BINGO…it’s what you DO in the here-and-now that counts

“Now is the time for all good men to come to the aid of their country.”  (read ‘men’ as men and women)…

Mr. Charles Kadlec wrote a piece in Forbes last week - though I steal some of his thunder with this quote…

Before our very eyes, President Obama is on the verge of establishing the
principle that the right to religious freedom comes not from our Creator, but
from those who rule us.

A government endowed right granted to women now trumps our unalienable right to act in accordance with our religious beliefs and conscience.

Not only does this overturn the First Amendment, it also tramples the nation’s founding principles as announced in the Declaration of Independence. Such an achievement would be the true audacity of power.

The fundamental question is whether the Catholic Church, and by extension,
individual Americans have to engage in activities according to the rulings of
this and future Presidents, or are we free to live our lives as we choose as long
as we do not harm another.

Are we free to engage in long standing religious practices that have never before been deemed unlawful, or has the federal government established a de-facto state “religion” that it is prepared to enforce through the full coercive power of its financial resources and the imposition of financial penalties.

Ann Lawinger wrote in a blog today published in ‘America’ (paraphrased and edited):

That any Republic with a Constitution specifically protecting Religious Liberties would force a religion to act against its own well known moral principles is picking a fight…and I hope that in America, the public wins.  If this issue passes muster, it will be another in the cavalcade of others to follow until we are all ‘wards of the state’ - we might as well go out and buy Soylent Green on-purpose.

Since when is the American government in the business of heavy-handed religious coercion - forcing them to act against their own beliefs as per government edict or administrative decree?   This week at a Congressional hearing United States Attorney General Eric Holder said he would enforce these regulations upon Catholic institutions.  This is no trivial matter.   It’s a fundamental redefinition of the relationship between church and state.  There is plenty of precedent for sounding the siren on this subject.  I believe that it was Churchill who said, “Those who fail to remember history are doomed to repeat it.”  The past 100 years weren’t pleasant.  Two world wars and a few others tell a sad story of misunderstandings and opportunities lost that could’ve been averted had cooler heads prevailed.  It proposes that the state is supreme and dictates what the Church may or may not do endlessly infringing upon religion and advancing the political interests of the state.

Please do not remain silent on this issue….mothers-to-be, adoptive parents and other family members and the UNBORN require your voice because either they have none or it’s drowned out by all of the twisted logic and double-speak so pervasive among our policy-makers.

Thank you,

J Krafft
MBA, ‘96

To participate, please submit your letter to dearfrjenkins@gmail.com

Mar 3, 2012
#J.Krafft #Dear Father Jenkins #Day 10 #Father Jenkins #Notre Dame #HHS Mandate #religious freedom #Religious Liberty
“Let’s… draft a sensible conscience clause, and make sure that all of our health care policies are grounded in clear ethics and sound science…” —~ from President Barack Obama’s 2009 Notre Dame Commencement Speech
Mar 2, 2012
Day 9- Kati Macaluso '05

Dear Fr. Jenkins, 

As a man who has devoted his Presidency to developing Notre Dame’s Catholicity, you do not need to be reminded of the difficulty such a task poses in today’s secular climate.  However, in light of the recent HHS mandate and proposed “compromise,” I cannot help but recall Pope Benedict’s words:  “This is the great challenge:  to give life to a true Catholic university, one that excels for the quality of its research and teaching and, at the same time, for its faithfulness to the Gospel and the Church’s Magisterium.”   Notre Dame’s willingness to do what some would say is impossible—to merge academic excellence with loyalty to the Catholic faith – has set her apart as the premier Catholic university. As President of this renowned institution, Catholics everywhere depend on your public denunciation of a mandate that forces man to do what Thoreau declared the unthinkable—“resign his conscience.” At what is truly a pivotal moment, God, country, and Notre Dame depend on you.

In her 2006 commencement address, Mary McAleese, the President of Ireland, reminded graduates what Notre Dame had taught them: to stand their ground.  Her words, “No matter what the crowd is saying, no matter what the pressure, you are the person, the sign of contradiction, who helps to clear up the mess in our world,” seem prescient now, in light of the recent HHS mandate requiring that all employers provide free abortifacient drugs, sterilization and contraceptive services.  The precedent this mandate sets—one in which government mandates trump conscience—is a most dangerous mess indeed. It is one that promises to rob us of liberty and denigrate our faith.

And this is why Notre Dame cannot afford to do anything less than boldly protest the mandate and its subsequent “accommodation.” After all, without conscience, how can we be signs of contradiction?  Without conscience, what good is reason?  Without conscience, Notre Dame, which aspires to graduate individuals who are intellectually and spiritually sound enough to defend all that is good, and right, and true, might as well join the ranks of universities that have abandoned their religious affiliation for the mistaken belief that academic excellence could be more easily pursued without it. 

I congratulate you on your recent appointment to the Commission on Presidential Debates, as it reinforces how committed you are to respectful and informed political dialogue.  As I write this, the Senate has voted against the amendment that would allow employers to oppose the HHS mandate on moral grounds, and the media, in its reporting of this vote, has reduced such ideas as religious freedom and moral obligation to mere travesty.  One look at Robert Pear’s article in today’s edition of The New York Times is enough to convince us that the political dialogue is less than respectful and informed in its representation of the Catholic Church.   All of us at Notre Dame are called now, more than ever, to raise our voices in an informed moral dialogue capable of exposing the violation of conscience that our government and media have hidden behind the rhetoric of “women’s health” and “economic wellbeing.”  May Our Lady imbue each of us, but especially you, the President of her University, with the undaunted courage to publicly and unflinchingly defend our faith.   The media may misrepresent you, Notre Dame’s popular reputation may suffer, and the government may punish you, but speak until you are heard.   Leave no one doubting that you speak for God, for country, and for Notre Dame. 

Sincerely,

Kati Macaluso ‘05

To participate, please submit your letter to dearfrjenkins@gmail.com

Mar 2, 2012
“It is not always the same thing to be a good man and a good citizen.” —Aristotle
Mar 1, 2012
Day 8- Robert E. Lee '79

Dear Fr. Jenkins,

I have been truly blessed in my life – I am one of ten children from wonderful parents who instilled in me the values of our Catholic faith.  I was fortunate to marry my soulmate (albeit a Marquette grad) and God has blessed us with eight wonderful children.  Notre Dame has always been a big part of my life-from going to football games as a young boy, to spending four enlightening years as an undergrad, and to sharing Notre Dame’s “magic” with my family at football games and through ten fun filled summers at the Alumni Family Hall. 

As Presidential candidate Rick Santorum so eloquently stated (and was so disturbingly criticized for), many of our higher educational institutions are ignorant of “Satan’s battle” for the hearts, souls, and minds of our young people. The University of Notre Dame is not immune to that battle.  The HHS mandate by the Obama Administration is, in my opinion, is an attack on religious freedom and specifically an attack on the Catholic Church.  As many Catholic leaders across the country have already done, we ALL need to unite as a team to win this battle.

I am certainly not trying to belittle the seriousness of what we are up against by using a football analogy, but I know you bleed “blue and gold” like most Notre Dame alums and hence I find the analogy hard to resist. As mentioned above, all Catholics should be on the same team, a team that can fittingly be called the “Fighting Catholics”. My current “Game Day” assessment of this “Fighting Catholic” football team looks something like this:

Playbook:    The Ten Commandments

Training Table Food:  The Body and Blood of Our Lord

Tailgaters:   Too Many

Alma Mater Song:  “Notre Dame Our Mother” (how can we lose?)

Conditioning Program:  The Sacraments, Prayer, and Mortification

Most Successful Play:  The “Hail Mary”

Penalties Most Often Called:  “Delay of Game” (for not doing anything), and “Excessive Celebrations”

The Band:  Will hopefully be playing “When the Saints Go Marching In” at the end of the game

While our Head Coach is always present, He relies greatly on a multitude of assistant coaches to inspire, educate, and lead His team. The team members all look to YOU as one of those inspired leaders because of your position as President of Our Lady’s University, and hopefully because of your desire to inspire all Catholics to hold true to their beliefs and to fight for those beliefs. Our end zone is being threatened by a force that could eventually pummel our team if we let them. We need to tighten our defense and most importantly we need the leaders on our team to inspire, educate, and coach us to victory.  Father, the “Fighting Catholics” prayerfully urge you to become a leader of our team and help us win this battle.  

Respectfully and Prayerfully,

Robert E. Lee ‘79

To participate, please submit your letter to dearfrjenkins@gmail.com

Mar 1, 2012
#Dear Father Jenkins #Father Jenkins #HHS Mandate #Religious Liberty #religious freedom #Day 8 #Robert E. Lee #Notre Dame

February 2012

17 posts

Feb 29, 2012
Day 7- Genevieve Nield ‘10

Dear Fr. Jenkins,

 As Catholics, we are taught that those who are insulted, persecuted and slandered for the sake of Jesus Christ will be rewarded in Heaven. 

 These very things are happening to Catholics because of the HHS mandate.  We are insulted for having well-formed consciences, we are derided for our seemingly antiquated views, and we are slandered for upholding the dignity of life.  We must not allow a secular society to deny us the ability to defend and uphold values that we know to be true.

You know what the Catholic Church teaches, and you are aware of your position.  Because of this, I implore you to use your influence as a role model and as a great leader of Catholic institutions in our nation.  You must declare your support of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (who, in turn, represent the universal Catholic Church) and renounce this unjust mandate.  Since Christ is for us, who can be against us?  You are already such an example for all of us.  Please, continue to be a pillar of faith not only for the Catholics but for the United States as well.

In Christ,

Genevieve Nield ‘10

To participate, please submit your letter to dearfrjenkins@gmail.com

Feb 29, 2012
#Dear Father Jenkins #Father Jenkins #HHS Mandate #Religious Liberty #religious freedom #Genevieve Nield #Notre Dame
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