A St. Paul school board clerk tied to Black Lives Matter is calling for dogs to “piss on white corpses” in Christian cemeteries, and parents are asking how someone with this contempt for faith and tradition is helping run their schools.
Story Snapshot
- School board clerk Chauntyll Allen suggested turning “White Christian cemeteries” into dog parks so dogs can urinate on “white corpses.”[1][2]
- Her comments came as Minneapolis moves to shut down a popular dog park on land officials call sacred to Dakota people.[1][2]
- Allen is a co-founder of Black Lives Matter Twin Cities and faces federal felony charges for a disruptive protest inside a church.[1][2]
- Local records show no “white Christian only” cemeteries, and graves are sealed, making her literal proposal impossible.[1][10][11]
School Official Calls for Dogs to “Piss on White Corpses”
St. Paul Public Schools Board of Education clerk Chauntyll Allen entered the dog park debate with a Facebook post that stunned many parents and churchgoers.[1][2] In a public thread about the Minnehaha off-leash dog park, she wrote that she did not understand why “we don’t just make dog parks at White Christian cemeteries” if white Christians agree, adding that people should “leave the indigenous land sacred and piss on the White corpses.”[2] The post spread quickly through local pages and then national media.[1][2]
Allen has defended her language, saying she believed that kind of shock was “what needed to be done to get the message across.”[1][2] She tied her comments to claims about historical injustice and respect for Dakota land at Coldwater Spring, where the Minnehaha dog park sits.[1] That site is listed as a Traditional Cultural Place for Dakota people, and city officials voted 8–1 to close the park by year’s end.[1][2] Her proposal, however, did not stay focused on policy; it targeted Christian burial grounds and white corpses as a symbol.
Records and Reality Undercut Allen’s Cemetery Claims
Allen’s phrase “White Christian cemeteries” suggests racially exclusive graveyards that exist only for white Christians, yet available records in Minnesota do not support that picture.[10][11] Oakland Cemetery in St. Paul is described as a non‑sectarian, nonprofit cemetery open to all, not restricted by race or faith.[10] Calvary Cemetery, founded in 1856, is Catholic and serves a diverse population.[11] Elmhurst Cemetery, owned by a Lutheran body, also serves the broader community.[10] The idea of formal “white Christian only” cemeteries here is not backed by documented practice.[10][11]
Her suggestion that dogs should urinate on “corpses” also clashes with basic burial facts.[1] Graves in modern cemeteries use caskets and concrete vaults that seal remains underground.[1] Even if someone let dogs roam there, they would be urinating on grass and headstones, not on bodies.[1] That gap between vivid image and physical reality shows her proposal is about provocation, not a realistic land‑use plan. Critics argue it trades honest debate for graphic contempt toward Christian death and mourning.[1][2]
Activist Background and Federal Felony Charges Raise Trust Questions
Allen is not just a local clerk; she is a co‑founder of Black Lives Matter Twin Cities and a prominent activist in the region.[1][2] St. Paul Public Schools even honored her as a “Black Woman of Impact” during Women’s History Month in March 2023.[1] That celebration came despite serious legal trouble tied to an earlier protest. She faces federal felony charges from a January 18, 2023 demonstration that stormed Cities Church in St. Paul during a Sunday service.[1][2]
During that incident, Allen and other protesters invaded the sanctuary in an anti‑Immigration and Customs Enforcement action, causing chaos and injury.[1][2] A congregant reportedly suffered a broken arm.[1] Allen later told an interviewer she believed that is “what needed to be done to get the message across,” comparing her actions to Jesus overturning tables in the temple when things were not right.[2] For many Christian families, that claim deepens concern: a school board clerk is using Scripture to justify physically disruptive protests in houses of worship and now calls for dogs to desecrate Christian burial grounds.[1][2]
Parents, Patriots, and the Fight Over School Board Values
St. Paul Public Schools responded to the cemetery comments by saying it was aware of the social media post and “does not have further comment.”[1][2] The silence from the district troubles many families who expect school leaders to protect children from racial hostility and open contempt for their faith.[7] Online, local users and national commentators are pushing back, sharing cemetery facts and calling her proposal inflammatory and cruel.[2][3][9] One elected member of the St. Paul School Board publicly distanced themselves from the remarks in a Reddit statement.[7]
Political groups are also using the episode as a warning about who now sits on school boards.[8] A viral post argues that “leftists are taking over school boards across the country,” pointing to Allen’s comments as the kind of ideology shaping decisions about curriculum, discipline, and respect for families.[8] For many conservative parents, the stakes feel clear. If officials in charge of public schools see Christian cemeteries as places to humiliate “white corpses,” they worry about how those same officials view their children, their churches, and the Constitution’s promise of equal respect under the law.[1][2]
Sources:
[1] Web – School Board Clerk: Make White Christian Cemeteries Into Dog Parks So …
[2] YouTube – School Board member Chauntyll Allen advise dog owners to have …
[3] Web – Minnesota school board member under fire after saying dogs should …
[7] Web – Follow – A Minnesota school board member is facing backlash after …
[8] Web – Statement from an actual elected member of the St. Paul School …
[9] Web – Leftists are taking over school boards across the country – Facebook
[10] Web – I don’t get why we don’t just make dog parks at White Christian …
[11] Web – Riverview Cemetery: Home
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