From: Brophy, Michael
Sent: Friday, May 25, 2018 12:19 PM
To: #All Benedictine Community
Subject: Difficult news
Sent: Friday, May 25, 2018 12:19 PM
To: #All Benedictine Community
Subject: Difficult news
Greetings,
all:
All
employees whose positions have been eliminated for budget reasons have been
advised of this difficult news. Please pray for them and their families as they
leave our University community.
Every
care has been taken to deliver these partings in a Benedictine manner.
Sadly,
Dr.
Michael Brophy
President
Benedictine
University
Commentary: A Few
Questions and What Good Is the University’s Mission Statement?
Were
the bloated salaries of the administration reduced in order to save these
employees? Did any administrators lose their jobs? Has Benedictine University
creatively and actively pursued student recruitment through affordable tuition
instead of increasing student debt? Has Benedictine University guaranteed
four-year graduation rates for its students? Has Benedictine University
aggressively pursued private and alumni donors? Has Benedictine University
considered aligning with other institutions in a partnership instead of
operating as an independent institution?
It is stated in the Benedictine University Center for Mission Identity, “[that the university’s] curriculum, policies and
activities draw on the wisdom of the Church regarding ways to build a just
society and live lives of holiness in the modern world. To that end, the
university engages key themes of modern Catholic social teaching identified by
the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops: life and dignity
of the human person; call to family, community, and participation; rights and
responsibilities; option for the poor and vulnerable; the dignity of work
and the rights of workers; solidarity; and care for God's creation…”
Indeed,
“[f]or the [Catholic] Church, there is no distinction between defending human
life and promoting the dignity of the human person. Pope Benedict XVI writes in
Caritas in Veritate [Charity in Truth] that ‘The Church forcefully maintains
this link between life ethics and social ethics, fully aware that a society
lacks solid foundations when, on the one hand, it asserts values such as the
dignity of the person, justice and peace, but then, on the other hand,
radically acts to the contrary by allowing or tolerating a variety of ways in
which human life is devalued and violated, especially where it is weak or
marginalized’” (no. 15) (Human Life and Dignity).
Surely,
flagrant indifference to the mental and physical well-being of its employees is
incompatible with the adage “cura personalis” (care for the entire person). Is this all that a Catholic University can offer to its employees who are fired?
“…Please pray for them and their families as they leave our University
community. Every care has been taken to deliver these partings in a Benedictine
manner…”
What
remains to be seen at universities like Benedictine and across the nation is
the rejoinder to an essential ethical question: “To what extent can
universities be considered [moral and just] while engaging in practices or
ideologies that run contrary to [their Mission, Vision, and Commitment
Statements]? ...Catholic universities have to decide whether or not running a
[consumerist/capitalist academic structure] that utilizes [and exploits their
employees]… fundamentally contradicts Catholic teaching [and its
ideals]” (The Fordham Ram Unfair Adjunct Wages Go Against Jesuit Values).
-Glen
Brown
To
read about The Continuing Demoralization of University and College Adjunct
Faculty, click
here.
Is this akin to "thoughts & prayers" for all those killed in gun violence?
ReplyDeleteWorth less than nothing...