When two families started battling what they saw as Critical race theory and anti-conservative bias seeping into the teaching materials in their childrenâs private school, they knew there would be backlash. That was especially true after the movement got critical mass, with hundreds of parents, alumni and others being involved.
What they didnât know is that it would extend to their children being expelled.
According to a Saturday Fox News report, parents Amy Gonzalez and Andrea Gross were informed by Columbus Academy in Gahanna, Ohio, that their children wouldnât be allowed to enroll in the school next year because they breached their enrollment agreement, which required them to maintain a âpositive and constructive working relationshipâ with the $30,000-a-year academy.
Instead, letters to the two mothers â who have three children total in the school â say they âpursued a course of action that has been anything but civil, respectful and faithful to the facts.â
âInstead,â the school added, âyou have engaged in a campaign against Columbus Academy through a sustained, and increasingly inflammatory, series of false and misleading attacks on the School and its leadership.â
âYour actions caused pain, and even fear for physical safety, among students, families, faculty, and staff,â stated the letter from Columbus Academy Head of School Melissa Soderberg and Board of Trustees President Jonathan Kass.
When asked for comment, the school didnât directly confirm the children had been expelled, although it issued a statement that was an implicit: âYeah, and?â
âColumbus Academy does not comment on the circumstances of any student or family. However, any parent who waged a public campaign of false and misleading statements and inflammatory attacks harmful to the employees, the reputation, or the financial stability of Columbus Academy would be in clear violation of the Enrollment Agreement and would be denied re-enrollment for the following school year,â a school representative said in a statement, Fox reported.
Gonzalez and Gross, who organized the Pro-CA Coalition to fight the proposed woke changes that had been taking place at the school, lambasted Columbus Academy in a news release on Friday, saying they had received the letters on June 11 âwith no prior warning.â
âWe will continue to advocate for our children and community,â Gonzalez said in the statement.
âExpelling our innocent children is retaliatory and discriminatory. Is Columbus Academy leadership and our Board of Trustees dictating what we are to believe as parents in order for our children not to be expelled from school? I cannot look the other way when the school behaves poorly and neglects its obligations to our children and faculty. As parents, we are going to stand together to protect our children and individuals who are threatened or persecuted for speech.â
âThe schoolâs retaliation will forever affect my innocent children,â Gross said.
âWe love Columbus Academy, the teachers, and the community so we decided to effectuate change from the inside. This is a clear message from the school to silence us and to intimidate and frighten the hundreds of other members in our Coalition.â
In an interview that appears on the Fox News website, Gonzalez and Gross again criticized the decision.
âThis is an educational institution which has chosen to punish children for their parents asking questions â I mean, the damage this does to the community, I mean, our children, obviously,â Gonzalez said.
âItâs ripping our community apart,â Gross added.
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According to The Daily Caller, the Pro-CA Coalition came about after a âcivil disobedience walkoutâ in January; they say the director of diversity and the head of grades 9-12, told students to march to the field house while screaming âsilence is violenceâ on Martin Luther King Jr. Day.
Leaving aside the fact that for children to do exactly as their leftist elders tell them is anything but disobedient, Gonzalez and Gross said the students were made to shout âMalcolm X,â âblack empowermentâ and âyou are racistâ during the event.
The mothers said that when they asked for answers from the school, they didnât get anything meaningful. Thatâs when they started getting sworn affidavits from parents and teachers regarding a hostile teaching environment at Columbus Academy.
In a video Gonzalez and Gross posted to YouTube on May 25, they showed off what appear to be some of their childrenâs assignments in school, some of which include racially divisive concepts â including critical race theory, the controversial academic concept that claims the United States was founded on âsystemic racismâ and its structures must be criticized from that vantage point.
In one assignment thatâs purported to be from the Columbus Academy, students are asked to listen to a podcast called âSide Effects of White Womenâ â which appears to be an episode of âSmall Doses with Amanda Seales.â
âThis is an episode that may touch some nerves but is about elevation. In a world where it seems like daily, many white women are exercising their privilege in potentially harmful ways to others itâs time to have a real convo about the past, present, and what needs to happen to change the future,â reads the description of the episode at Apple Podcasts.
In another screenshot of an assignment sheet, students are being asked to read Robin DiAngeloâs âWhite Fragilityâ â the tome about how white people are racist but are also sensitive around areas of race. So if youâre white and you admit youâre a racist, at least you acknowledge that. If youâre white and you canât admit youâre racist, itâs even worse. The whiteness studies tome became âCritical Race Theory for Dummiesâ in the aftermath of George Floydâs death last year.
Gonzalez and Gross also alleged the schoolâs director of diversity and community life said âwhat we are dealing with is 110 years of white supremacyâ regarding Columbus Academy. This was taken from a sworn affidavit regarding a Zoom call. The same director also purportedly said the schoolâs sports team name, the Vikings, should be changed because Vikings âwere white and raped and pillaged.â
The Pro-CA Coalition also sent the school a letter that said faculty members had been given material from critical race theorist Ibram X. Kendi as part of their training. At the time, they told The Daily Caller, theyâd collected between 70 and 100 signed statements regarding incidents of political and racial bias at the school and that the âgroup has grown to hundreds of parents, alumni, teachers, and students.â
However, in its letter to Gonzalez and Gross, the school accused them of scheming to withhold tuition from Columbus Academy in order to force a change.
âYou have taken steps to explore how you, and with your encouragement, others, could withhold tuition payments and place them in escrow until your demands are met. You have also discussed pursuing charitable entity status for your organization, in the stated hope of persuading Columbus Academy donors to re-direct their contributions to your organization where you could use the funds as leverage to pursue your agenda,â the letter read.
As for placing the funds in escrow, the school could have been referring to a podcast on which Gross said putting them in an escrow âwas a good ideaâ when a host floated it, according to Fox. In terms of redirecting the donations, a parent told Fox News via email, âThe idea of withholding further donations to the school was posed as a question, and was asked what the groups thoughts were regarding the idea.â
There doesnât seem to have been evidence that either one of these were serious ideas or as dastardly as the school alleges, and one imagines that neither is the truly great crime theyâve really committed in the schoolâs eyes.
What really matters is that they questioned âanti-racistâ orthodoxy â and one guesses school officials donât want other parents doing that, because theyâve seen whatâs happening across the country. They donât want it interfering with the world of Columbus Academy.
Whatever the case, the main victims here are the children. Parents are being told that if they donât shut up, their kids will be next. It may be heinous, but donât think other schools arenât watching â and donât think they wonât copy this strategy if it shuts the Pro-CA Coalition up.
This article appeared originally on The Western Journal.
