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NOTRE DAME, IN - New Faculty Hiring Policy Undermines Catholic Identity as University Declines to Release Hiring Results
We deeply regret bringing you news of a new hiring
policy that, unless changed, will soon fatally
compromise Notre Dame's Catholic identity. Here are
the facts:
As we have stressed, all studies confirm that a
university's religious identity depends upon its faculty.
That is where secularization begins and where it
triumphs before alumni know what's happening.
Since the student body remains largely Catholic or
Methodist or Baptist, the liturgies and the like continue
while the heart of the institution, the faculty, is being
transformed. Ultimately, the religious façade
collapses. That is the unbroken pattern traced by
former Notre Dame Provost James T. Burtchaell, CSC,
in his landmark study, The Dying of the Light, as well
as by others.
The animating purpose of
Project
Sycamore has been
to alert alumni and others in the Notre Dame family
before it is too late that secularization is well underway
at Notre Dame.
We have focused on the alarming decline in Catholic
faculty representation from 85% to 53% over the last
several decades. We have recently distributed two
essays by the
distinguished Notre Dame historian
Wilson Miscamble, CSC,
in which he relates why
this has happened and why only a decisive about-face
in the school's hiring policy will prevent Catholics from
slipping into a diminishing minority.
If this happens, the school will have lost its Catholic
identity. The University itself tells us so. Notre Dame's
Mission Statement declares, "The
Catholic identity of
the University depends upon, and is nurtured by, the
continuing presence of a predominant number of
Catholic intellectuals"; and all agree that this means a
solid majority.
Nevertheless, it now appears that even the remaining
slender Catholic majority is to be lost. While Father
Jenkins's professions of concern about the
declining number of Catholic
faculty sparked hope, he has now endorsed a hiring
policy that insures this erosion will continue.
Under this policy, the goal is "to exceed annually 50%
in the hiring of [Catholics to the] instructional faculty,"
according to Father Robert Sullivan, the chair of the
Provost's ad hoc committee on hiring. When Father
Sullivan's statement appeared in The
Irish Rover, we wrote Father
Jenkins asking whether this is indeed the new policy.
When he did not respond, we wrote again to say that
we must conclude with regret that it is. (See our letters.)
This goal will fall far short of maintaining a Catholic
majority because of the faculty demographics that
have resulted from decades of hiring with an eye
principally to secular reputation instead of to
maintaining Catholic faculty predominance. As we
said to Father Jenkins:
"Because of the heavy concentration of Catholics
among retirees, it is obvious that in the short term a
hiring rate just above 50% will not stem the decline in
Catholic faculty. And our long-term projections show
that, even in the unlikely event that the goal is
consistently met, Catholics would soon become a
dwindling minority and would not regain majority
status within the 67-year time frame of our
calculations. That is, for all practical purposes
Catholics would never again be a majority."
We invite you to examine these projections, which are based on information given to us by the University and available from other sources. These projections are reflected in graphs in an accompanying memorandum describing our assumptions and other details about the calculations. We offered to discuss them with University representatives, but received no response. Indeed, while Father Sullivan reported with evident satisfaction that a majority of those hired last year are Catholics, he declined to disclose what the result has been. Did the 53% go up or down or remain the same? We asked Father Jenkins. He did not answer. Neither parents nor students nor donors nor alumni know.
Whatever those results, we are confident of the
fundamental soundness of our projections. They are
confirmed by their correspondence with the actual
experience of the College of Arts & Letters over a very
recent seven-year period. During those years,
between 50% and 55% of those hired were Catholic,
and nevertheless Catholic representation declined on
average one percent a year. Our projections match
that pattern
The obvious question is why a palpably infirm policy
has been adopted. Our projections show not only what
won't work, but also what will. A rate of 60-65% --
perhaps an additional seven to ten Catholics a year -
would serve. Surely this cannot be out of reach for the
premier Catholic university in the country.
The most plausible - we think the only plausible -
reason for the establishment of the new rule is faculty
resistance to anything better. As we have noted before,
a majority of the faculty opposes taking an applicant's
Catholicism into account at all. (See Baylor Study) The
article by Dr. John McGreevy
that we have circulated discloses the singular
lack of
enthusiasm for the Mission Statement that Father
Miscamble reports is widespread.
While powerful elements of the faculty may carry the
day, they have neither the right nor the authority to do
so. That right and authority, as well as the
responsibility, belong to the President, the Board, and
the Fellows. (See Articles and Statutes)
We have urged Father Jenkins, and will urge the
Board and the Fellows, to reexamine the
consequences of the new hiring policy. We hope they
will agree on reflection that the cost of faculty
pacification - the progressive weakening and ultimate
death of the Catholic soul of the University - is far too
high. Their final decision will set the future course of
Notre Dame, for the point of no return is finally
here.
Please help spread word of this grave situation by
forwarding this message to everyone you know who
may be concerned about the future of Notre Dame as
a Catholic university. (use the "Forward email" link at
the bottom of the page).
Sincerely,
Project Sycamore Officers and Directors
Officers
William H. Dempsey ('52)
President
Joseph A. Reich, Jr. ('57)
Vice President
George L. Heidkamp ('52)
Treasurer & Secretary
Directors
Richard V. Allen ('57, '58)
Dr. Daniel M. Boland ('56, '61)
Timothy M. Dempsey ('89)
Dr. John A. Gueguen, Jr. ('56, '58)
Dr. Susan Biddle Shearer ('88)
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