ACLU Files Lawsuit To Protect Religious Freedom Of Florida High School Students (8/27/2008)
Santa Rosa County School Officials Misuse Public Positions To Promote Their
Religious Viewpoints
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: media@aclu.org or media@aclufl.org
PENSACOLA, FL – Santa Rosa County school officials are using their
governmental positions to promote their personal religious beliefs in public
schools, according to a lawsuit filed today on behalf of two Pace High School
students by the American Civil Liberties Union of Florida and the national ACLU.
The lawsuit reveals a repeated pattern by school officials – including Santa
Rosa County School Board members and Pace High School Principal H. Frank Lay –
of promoting and endorsing prayers at graduation ceremonies and other school
events, of sponsoring religious ceremonies and holding official school events at
churches.
"Parents, not the public schools, should be responsible for deciding whether
their children receive religious education," said Benjamin Stevenson, staff
attorney with the ACLU of Florida's Northwest Region office. "Religious freedom
is eroded when the government endorses any particular religious
viewpoint."
According to the lawsuit, filed in U.S. District Court for the Northern
district of Florida, graduation ceremonies during the past five years at
Central, Jay, Milton, Navarre and Pace High Schools have included prayers by
students – often members of groups like the Fellowship of Christian Athletes or
the Christian World Order. The graduation ceremonies at Santa Rosa Adult School
and Santa Rosa Learning Academy also have included prayers.
School administrators and teachers also mix their responsibilities as public
officials with their personal religious beliefs by planning baccalaureates,
helping to decide the place of worship at which they would be held and leading
prayers with students. Additionally, school officials have interjected their own
religious perspectives at elementary school graduations, a middle school
Christmas concert, and high school football and cheerleading banquets.
The lawsuit also documents how teachers and staff at Pace High School preach
about "judgment day with the Lord" and offer Bible readings and biblical
interpretations during student meetings. While such activities are
constitutionally protected at private schools and in religious communities, the
government should not be involved in making such decisions.
"The government should not be in the business of deciding which religions to
promote," said Daniel Mach, Director of Litigation for the ACLU's Program on
Freedom of Religion and Belief. "Individuals, families and religious communities
should be free to make their own decisions about religion."
A copy of the lawsuit can be found online at: www.aclu.org/religion/schools/36566lgl20080827.html
Additional information about the ACLU's Program on Freedom of Religion and
Belief can be found online at: www.aclu.org/religion/index.html
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