Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Despite the assurance from our friends in the south, I think a practicing Catholic is going to be more comfortable in the Northeast or Midwest. I'm not suggesting that there will always be problems in the south, but it's more comfortable when you aren't an object of curiosity defined by tired stereotypes.
Sorry, any Catholic would be more comfortable in South Louisiana than Iowa.
Also if OP's 18 year old cares about this 1/10th of the amount that OP does they should probably just stay home.
What schools discussed on DCUM are in Iowa? As a practicing Catholic who has traveled a lot, I can say that Chicago, St. Louis, Madison, Ann Arbor, Boston, Philadelphia are FAR More comfortable than south Louisiana. The KKK (which started as an anti-Catholic group) is still active in South Louisiana.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DC grew up in this area and has expressed an interest in attending school in a warmer climate (i.e., south of here). My family experienced anti-Catholic prejudice from Southerners in the past and I’m wary the claims of new found tolerance. Does anyone have recent experience regarding the willingness of traditional Southern colleges (so-called “Southern Ivies” such as Duke, Vanderbilt, Tulane, Emory, Rice, SMU and Wake Forrest) to welcome practicing Catholics? I wouldn’t want DC to have to hide their faith to be accepted by peers.
These schools have a healthy dose of students from other parts of the country.
Most aren't Catholic. A practicing Catholic wont fee comfortable in Winston-Salem, NC.
As a Catholic who grew up in WS, I agree. Heard a lot of anti-Catholic vitriol, unfortunately.
Anonymous wrote:Wow. People are spouting some serious bullshit here. I grew up Catholic in North Carolina, went to UNC and had lots of Catholic friends at both Duke and Wake. UNC's Newman Center was my home away from home.
I think OP is looking for personal experience with the schools listed, not prejudiced speculation.
Anonymous wrote:Despite the assurance from our friends in the south, I think a practicing Catholic is going to be more comfortable in the Northeast or Midwest. I'm not suggesting that there will always be problems in the south, but it's more comfortable when you aren't an object of curiosity defined by tired stereotypes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Despite the assurance from our friends in the south, I think a practicing Catholic is going to be more comfortable in the Northeast or Midwest. I'm not suggesting that there will always be problems in the south, but it's more comfortable when you aren't an object of curiosity defined by tired stereotypes.
Sorry, any Catholic would be more comfortable in South Louisiana than Iowa.
Also if OP's 18 year old cares about this 1/10th of the amount that OP does they should probably just stay home.
What schools discussed on DCUM are in Iowa? As a practicing Catholic who has traveled a lot, I can say that Chicago, St. Louis, Madison, Ann Arbor, Boston, Philadelphia are FAR More comfortable than south Louisiana. The KKK (which started as an anti-Catholic group) is still active in South Louisiana.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Despite the assurance from our friends in the south, I think a practicing Catholic is going to be more comfortable in the Northeast or Midwest. I'm not suggesting that there will always be problems in the south, but it's more comfortable when you aren't an object of curiosity defined by tired stereotypes.
Sorry, any Catholic would be more comfortable in South Louisiana than Iowa.
Also if OP's 18 year old cares about this 1/10th of the amount that OP does they should probably just stay home.
Anonymous wrote:Despite the assurance from our friends in the south, I think a practicing Catholic is going to be more comfortable in the Northeast or Midwest. I'm not suggesting that there will always be problems in the south, but it's more comfortable when you aren't an object of curiosity defined by tired stereotypes.
Anonymous wrote:I went to a big SEC school and had a ton of Catholic friends. It was never an issue for anyone.