WISCONSIN: Christian College bows to Islam, drops ‘Crusaders’ name for fear of offending Muslims
WISCONSIN: Christian College bows to Islam, drops ‘Crusaders’ name for fear of offending Muslims
Maranatha
Baptist University, a Christian college in Wisconsin is dropping its
“Crusaders” nickname after nearly 50 years, claiming the moniker has
become outdated in a “more global society,” “a more Muslim society,” say officials.
Ibrahim
Hooper, communications director at CAIR, told FoxNews he welcomed the
“Crusaders” change, but said he found team names or mascots that
incorporate race or ethnicity more problematic, particularly those
pertaining to Native Americans. “I welcome the spirit behind the
change,” Hooper said. “It’s obvious they thought about this. I applaud
their effort.”
FOX News “The heartbeat behind this was not political correctness, but expanded opportunities for our students.”- Matt Davis, executive vice president, Maranatha Baptist University, told Fox News. (In other words, we want some of that Saudi tuition money)
Maranatha Baptist University in
Watertown and its Division III athletic teams have used the name since
its founding in 1968. Matt Davis, the university’s executive vice
president, said no complaints have been received by the school and
stressed that it coincides with its name change from Maranatha Baptist
College in December.
“But I also agree that times change
and we understand that context changes,” Davis told FoxNews.com. “Our
world has changed since 9/11 and we’ve become a more global society with
the Internet. The heartbeat behind this was not political correctness,
but expanded opportunities for our students.”
While noting the contextual ties to a
“Crusade” — defined by Merriam-Webster as “any of the military
expeditions undertaken by Christian powers in the 11th, 12th and 13th
centuries to win the Holy Land from the Muslims” — Davis said the
university’s education mission will not be altered. He does not expect
the university’s decision to prompt other colleges to consider replacing
the nickname elsewhere.
“Every school is different and every
context is different, and I respect the leaders of those institutions,”
Davis said. “We’re in no position to give input to or to instruct anyone
else.”
Meanwhile, an
effort to move away from using “Crusaders” as a team name or as a
mascot is not underway at several other colleges and universities
contacted by FoxNews.com. At least eight other schools use the moniker,
including the College of Holy Cross in Massachusetts and Capital
University in Ohio. In all, representatives from four colleges told
FoxNews.com that the name is not an issue on their campuses.
“It’s important to understand how our
alumni would feel about it,” Capital University spokeswoman Nichole
Johnson said, adding that the Lutheran-affiliated school has used the
name since 1963. “If it ever did become a divisive issue, or a dominant
one on campus, we would be happy to have that conversation.”
In 1963, Johnson said the university’s
council voted to change the school’s name to the Crusaders from the
Fighting Lutherans, which was deemed inappropriate at the time. Other
names considered at the time were the Saints and the Purple Knights,
Johnson told FoxNews.com. Elsewhere, at Clarke University in Iowa, president Joanne Burrows said the Crusaders nickname is on solid footing.
A spokesman at Belmont Abbey College
in North Carolina told FoxNews.com the “Crusader” name is an 80-year
tradition at the university, where it’s a source of pride representing
“heroism, chivalry and piety.”
Ibrahim Hooper, communications
director at the Council on American-Islamic Relations, told FoxNews.com
he welcomed the “Crusaders” change, but said he found team names or
mascots that incorporate race or ethnicity more problematic,
particularly those pertaining to Native Americans.
“I welcome the spirit behind the change,” Hooper said. “It’s obvious they thought about this. I applaud their effort.”
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