Wednesday, September 4, 2024 - Irish teacher Enoch Burke has been jailed for a third time after he was arrested outside the school that sacked him for refusing to “call a boy a girl.”
Mr Burke became caught up in a gender row at Wilson's
Hospital School in May 2022.
He told his headteacher that he "opposed
transgenderism" due to his religious beliefs and stated he would not
address a student, who was transitioning, by their new name and using
"they" pronouns.
Burke publicly criticised the school's demand that he uses
the student's chosen pronouns.
It came following an email to staff from headteacher Niamh
McShane, in which they were asked to address the pupil in question by their new
pronouns.
He was first jailed in September 2022 and spent 100 days in
prison before his release.
He was jailed for a second time in September 2023 in which
he spent Christmas behind bars before he was released in June this year.
Now, Mr Burke, who is appealing his dismissal from the
school, has been put in jail again for going to the school.
The Evangelical Christian teacher was yesterday, September
2, placed inside a Garda (police) vehicle outside Wilson's Hospital School in
Ireland's Co Westmeath and driven to the Four Courts in Dublin, reported
the Irish Independent.
He was put behind bars at Mountjoy Prison last night for
repeatedly defying a High Court injunction banning him from the school's
grounds.
Justice Michael Quinn jailed him for contempt of court after
the history and German teacher refused to give a "yes" or
"no" answer when asked if he intended to return to the Westmeath
school again.
As the order was passed, Mr Burke told Justice Quinn:
"You will answer to God for imprisoning me for my religious beliefs."
Mr Burke was sacked from the school for gross misconduct in
January 2023 after he refused to use a transitioning pupil's new name and
chosen pronoun, saying it was against his religious beliefs.
Despite his dismissal, a court heard in February he was
still being paid his salary pending his appeal against the school's decision to
sack him. At that time, he had been paid around €72,000 while still on
administrative leave.
Justice Quinn said there was an "urgent
requirement" for him to deal with the difficulties Wilson's Hospital
School has been experiencing, due to Mr Burke's continued presence there.
He said Mr Burke was disrupting day-to-day activities and
duties performed by teachers and staff in the school.
During the hearing, he and his family protested that the
many judges who have dealt with the case had failed to deal with a report made
by the then school principal Niamh McShane.
Mr Burke said Ms McShane had claimed he was guilty of gross
misconduct due to his refusal to call a transitioning student by a new name and
the pronoun "they". He said the legality of that demand was never
considered by the court.
However, last year, Judge Owens found the school was right
to suspend Mr Burke over fears of "harmful and disruptive conduct".
He cited Mr Burke's challenge to the principal during a
staff meeting, a chapel service and at a dinner.
Mr Burke yesterday insisted: "This court is simply
denying me my religious beliefs, and my right to my religious beliefs. I am a
Christian. I have Christian beliefs. My belief is male and female, God made
them male and female."
He quoted passages from the Bible, including Genesis and the
Gospel of Matthew, and claimed teachers in Ireland were being "commanded
to force transgenderism on students".
He said this was a "hellish ideology" which
resulted in children taking puberty blockers and being "scarred for
life".
He said his religious beliefs would not lead children
"down the road of suicide, mutilations, regret" and a breakdown of
relationships with their parents.
"I did not force my beliefs on anyone," he said.
"That belief was forced on me. I was commanded to feed that poison to
young people in my care."
The court heard Mr Burke has not paid €88,000 in fines he
incurred for attending the school in defiance of the court order last year.
Rosemary Mallon BL, for the school, confirmed there were
"difficulties" in collecting it.
She said the law allowed for a debt collection agency to
recoup fines handed out in the District Court, but sequestration of assets was
more generally used against a company rather than an individual, and there was
no simple way to do it.
She confirmed Mr Burke is still being paid his salary by the
Department of Education, while his appeal against his January 2023 dismissal
remains on hold.
The court was told that appeal cannot be heard until the
Court of Appeal rules on Mr Burke's challenge concerning members of the appeal
board.
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