An Arizona university professor has been
suspended over controversial comments he made about Black Lives Matter
activists nearly a year ago.
Professor Toby Jennings of Grand Canyon University ignited a firestorm
recently after the university posted a link to a ministry forum from
last September in which he said that some members in the Black Lives
Matter group “should be hung.”
“They are saying things that are not helpful in any shape or form or
human dignity or flourishing,” the African-American professor said
during the forum, which was videotaped.
GCU officials told Fox 10 Phoenix that Jennings was advised that his
comments during the forum, called “God’s concern for the poor: What’s
missing in social justice,” were offensive, but it was not brought up to
the school’s top executives.
However, members of the Black Lives Matter movement were outraged when
it was shared recently.
In response, Jennings was suspended for the upcoming fall semester. He
has also apologized.
Members of the BLM movement told Fox 10 Phoenix that the school’s
response was not enough.
“My heart is broken, not because GCU is our enemy, but they claim to be
our brothers and sisters,” said Pastor Warren Stewart, Jr. “Brothers and
sisters please stop avoiding talking about ways racism … makes us
uncomfortable.”
Brian Mueller, president of Grand Canyon University, said the critics of
the school in this case are wrong.
“It was terribly wrong, but it is an isolated incident and it does not
represent who our faculty is and it does not represent who are students
are,” he said.
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