Free speech advocates, faculty and students criticized the decision to remove the LGBTQ+ flags from two professors’ office windows.
Emma Rahmani from baseimage
Two weeks after Boston University removed LGBTQ+ pride flags from the office windows of two faculty members in the Women’s, Gender and Sexuality Studies Department, the university’s president has apologized, The Boston Globe reported.
“Our university and our policies exist within a larger social context—one that is dynamic and complex,” BU president Melissa Gilliam wrote in an email to the campus community. “In the public conversation about Boston University’s time, place, and manner policies, that spotlight has fallen disproportionately on our LGBTQIA+ community, and I have heard how difficult and painful that has been. I am deeply sorry.”
The flags were taken down as part of the university’s signage policy; last spring, the university cited that policy when it took down posters advocating for international students who had been detained, according to the university’s student newspaper.
Gilliam wrote in her email that the university would temporarily cease taking down signs and flags.
The message came after speech advocates, faculty, students and others denounced the flags’ removal, and a petition calling for the policy to be revised accrued more than 2,200 signatures. Some said the move appeared like an attempt to avoid the Trump administration’s scrutiny.
