|
The Oregonian: Shirt with civil rights message and racist slur leads to Oregon gov’t employee’s firing and federal suit
By Zane Sparling
.....Six-year-old Ruby Bridges is unbowed, her gaze steady despite the racist graffiti creeping into the frame of the iconic image.
The painting — a true-to-life illustration of the fight to integrate New Orleans public schools in the 1960s — is considered one of Norman Rockwell’s best. Bridges, now 71, has long supported it.
But the picture on Thursday spurred a federal civil rights lawsuit from an Oregon public employee, who says she was fired for wearing a T-shirt with the artwork, titled “The Problem We All Live With,” printed on it.
The suit filed on behalf of Beth Schmidt in the U.S. District Court of Oregon acknowledges that the painting includes a racist slur, but says Rockwell painted it for “documentary and condemnatory” purposes.
The suit doesn’t seek a specific amount of monetary damages.
The litigation claims that Schmidt’s abrupt dismissal Nov. 17 from the Mid-Willamette Valley Council of Governments, a coordinating agency serving Marion, Polk and Yamhill counties, violated her First Amendment rights and constituted viewpoint discrimination.
|