Principal ‘horrified’ when Enoch Burke asked her to withdraw request to support transgender pupil
Photograph: PA/Niall Carson The former principal of Wilson’s Hospital School in Co Westmeath was “absolutely horrified” when teacher Enoch Burke interrupted a school religious service asking her to withdraw her “demand” that teachers “accept transgenderism”, the High Court has heard. Niamh McShane said she also felt “agitated” and “hunted” when Mr Burke approached her at the end of a dinner following the service on June 21st last. He again asked her to withdraw her “demand” and stood so close to her that, although he was not spitting at her, she “could feel his spittle”. She said she never asked teachers to “accept transgenderism” and her request to teachers, made on May 9th by email, was to support a transitioning student in their request to be addressed by their new preferred name and the pronoun they. Ms McShane was embarrassed when Mr Burke stood up as a bishop was about to deliver the concluding prayer at the religious service, before a congregation including staff, students, community leader and clergy, and spoke for about 2½ minutes. She was “absolutely horrified” for the transitioning student, by Mr Burke’s remarks. She said Mr Burke previously made a “significant challenge” to her request when he alleged, in an email sent on May 10th last, that a “belief system” was being forced on students. Before this, she had had mainly positive encounters with Mr Burke concerning conflicts between his very strong Christian beliefs and events in the school, and had hoped they could work through it. Ms McShane said, after reflecting on the events of June 21st and taking advice, she decided Mr Burke’s behaviour had to be treated as a serious disciplinary matter and prepared a report for the board of management. It was important for the school to uphold its own ethos and to support students and Mr Burke, she believed, had broken the code of conduct for teachers for reasons including he had not been caring or fair. ‘Gross misbehaviour’ Her view was that Mr Burke had engaged in “gross misbehaviour” and was “entrenched” in his position. She had attended a disciplinary meeting held by the board of management on January 19th last, which resulted in Mr Burke being served a notice of dismissal, which he has appealed. Mr Burke and other members of his family were present and their “loud and clear message” was they were objecting to the meeting proceeding. Ms McShane was giving evidence on Wednesday, the second day of the school’s action against Mr Burke, in which the core issue is whether he was wrongly suspended on full pay from his teaching position in August 2022 pending a disciplinary process. Arising from his conduct in court on Tuesday, including two hours of persistent submissions and interruptions over discovery issues, Mr Justice Alexander Owens ruled he was in “obvious contempt” in the face of the court. Before the evidence began, the judge said he was satisfied with the school’s proposals for addressing the discovery issues raised by Mr Burke. She was “horrified” when Mr Burke, whom she did not then know, “essentially hijacked the service” towards its end and delivered a “diatribe” and “a very personal attack” on Ms McShane which she could not “make head or tail of”. She approached Mr Burke afterwards, asking him who he was, he told her, said he was a teacher and went into a “diatribe”. At the dinner afterwards, she witnessed another woman, a student’s mother, physically preventing Mr Burke from moving towards Ms McShane, she said. – This Summarize was created by Neural News AI (V1). Source: https://www.irishtimes.com/crime-law/courts/2023/03/29/principal-hoped-she-could-work-through-issue-with-enoch-burke-before-email-challenge/