Heritage
Foundation
Meet
the Stanford Senior Who Stood Up for Marriage Against Intolerance
Caitlin
Burke
April
22, 2014
Despite
attempts to silence her and like-minded friends, Stanford University
senior Judy Romea refused to back down.
Romea,
president of a campus group, had hoped to create a civil atmosphere
during an all-day conference at Stanford that she helped organize to
discuss “marriage, family, and sexual integrity.” Then the
school’s Student Graduate Council defunded the event and slapped
her group, the Stanford Anscombe Society, with a hefty “security”
fee in an attempt to quash the pro-marriage event.
Romea
persevered, though, and led the Stanford Anscombe Society (SAS) to
put on a successful conference April 5 called Communicating Values:
Marriage, Family & the Media. In an exclusive interview with
The
Foundry, she discussed what motivated her to push forward while
facing uncharitable resistance.
“The
whole point of SAS is not to declare political victory when it comes
to the issue of same-sex marriage,” Romea said. “That’s a very
myopic view. The mission is really to engage each other and show the
world what real and valuable relationships are [between] people who
agree and disagree.”
Romea,
who was born and grew up in Valencia, Calif., founded SAS as a
college freshman. The group, named after British philosopher
Elizabeth Anscombe, meets weekly to discuss the roles of family,
marriage, and sexual integrity in the lives of Stanford students.
Romea
says she never expected to be met with hostility by Stanford
classmates and student leaders. Instead, she hoped the group would
promote a culture of dialogue and tolerance on Stanford’s diverse
campus. She hoped to see relationships and conversations thrive.
Romea’s
interest in the study of marriage and family began early, she says. A
conference held by the Ruth Institute in 2012 first sparked her
interest in academic arguments regarding marriage and human
sexuality. Even as a high school student, she says, she often talked
to friends about the value of stable relationships.
One
goal of her group’s conference was to “expose [students] to the
intellectual and rational arguments for marriage, as well as [other]
tools they have at their disposal with which to communicate their
values,” Romea said.
These
good intentions apparently didn’t matter to leaders of the Graduate
Student Council. Romea, a business major, was buckling down for final
exams when the student government group unexpectedly pulled funding
for the conference—to her frustration and disappointment.
The
student council expressed disapproval with the ideology of the
scheduled speakers, several of whom were advocates of marriage as the
union of a man and a woman—and oppose redefining marriage. Among
them was Ryan T. Anderson, The Heritage Foundation’s William E.
Simon fellow, whom the student council claimed March 5 would make
some in the campus community “feel threatened.”
To
counter the “unsafe space” the student council also said the
marriage conference would create, it ordered Romea’s group to
provide $5,600 for event security or cancel. After SAS garnered some
media attention by publicly demanding the lifting of what Romea
called a “tax on free speech,” the university administration
“found” sufficient funds to cover security costs.
Romea
was struck by the fact that some Stanford students seem to think
marriage should be an off-limits topic for her group. The irony to
her was that although the lecture forum is designed to be a place
where diverse ideas can be expressed, some were disgruntled that
invited speakers would oppose the redefinition of marriage. She said:
A
void in the campus discourse exists regarding marriage, family, and
human sexuality. At best, deviations from these values are viewed as
strange, while at worst, they’re the result of bigotry and hatred —
as we saw with the funding controversy regarding this conference.”
Romea
didn’t press ahead alone, though. She attributes the success of the
event to the hard work and courage of fellow SAS leaders Elisa
Figueroa and James Capps, as well as planning committee members Irene
Onyeneho and Josephine Romea (her sister).
Through
it all, Romea says, her mother cheered her on. When she thought twice
about holding the conference, her mother encouraged her, saying, “Why
would you back down when anything that is good requires a lot of
sacrifice and a lot of tenacity?” Romea felt her confidence return.
“Standing
up for marriage [takes] a commitment to living your life according to
your principles,” she said.
Marriage
advocates need each other at a time when they are being tarred as
bigots or worse, she told The Foundry.
“It’s
beautiful to be able to collaborate with other individuals on
something like this,” she said, adding:
If
the whole controversy has taught me anything, it’s that the fight
for marriage and family will be won, not by shouting down the other
side, but through teamwork and friendship of the kind demonstrated by
the Stanford Anscombe Society’s members and supporters.
Read
this article and otehrs with photos and links at Heritage Foundation
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