1st Amendment Shredded: Students
Told They Can’t Talk about Religion During School Hours by Jillian G ·
In beautiful
Colorado Springs, Colorado, a legal battle is building between Christian
students and the school district. Central to the lawsuit is the students’
rights to free speech and religious liberty, and the concerns of the school
district about violating the separation of church and state.
For the past
three years, Chase Windebank, now a senior at Pine Creek High School, has been
meeting informally with fellow classmates, usually in an empty choir room, to
discuss their Christian faith, pray for their classmates, and sing hymns. A
favorite is “Amazing Grace.”
But on
September 29 of this year, Chase was summoned to the office of Assistant
Principal James Lucas. Jeremy Tedesco, the attorney representing Chase in his
suit against the school district, says:
He was told that he could no longer
pray with his fellow students during free time because of the separation of
church and state. He was told that he could pray before the school day begins
or after the school day ends, but he could not do it during the school day.
Tedesco’s law
firm, Alliance Defending Freedom, specializes in religious liberty cases.
The next day
Chase was called into the office of Principal Kolette Back. There, it was
“reaffirmed that his religious speech could not take place during the open
time” period called “Seminar.”
According to
the lawsuit:
Defendants Back and Lucas stated
that because of the separation of church and state and because they regarded
the Seminar period as instructional time, they were banning students’
discussion of issues of the day from a religious perspective during the open
time of Seminar period.
A spokesman for
Academy School District Number 20 confirmed the high school’s actions in a
written statement:
Students were told that, according
to state law and district policy, they could meet during non-instructional
time. That is before or after school.
Tedesco says
the primary issue is one of free speech:
Public schools should encourage the
free exchange of ideas. Instead, this school implemented an ill-conceived ban
that singles out religious speech for censorship during free time.
The district’s
attorney, Patricia Richardson, responded in a letter to Tedesco:
No non-curricular clubs are
permitted to meet during that time period at Pine Creek High School. Therefore,
Mr. Windebank may resume his prayer meetings at Pine Creek High School, but he
must do so during non-instructional time, that is before 7:45 a.m. when classes
begin, and after 2:45 p.m., when classes end for the day.
Chase and the
other Christian students are continuing to meet, but are abiding by the
school’s guidelines until the suit is settled.
Comments
Students can
show their disagreement with school policy by withholding their support of
school functions and refusing indoctrination. They can refuse to demonstrate
tolerance of political correctness. They can refuse to accept secular humanism.
They can discuss politics openly. They can remind teachers that they can answer
test questions to earn an A, but they don’t believe the answers are actually
correct or the questions worth answering. Better yet, students can homeschool.
Norb Leahy,
Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader
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