| There are several states in the US that authorized praying room for muslim students in the public school (including Maryland). How is carrying bible around is different from Muslim's 5 times prayers on the school territory? |
I'm the Satanic poster and I disagree with you, PP. It is completely appropriate for kids like mine to go to school with their Satanic literature, and if they believe in Satan and want to worship Satan, to share that information with their schoolmates (not during instructional time, but on the playground, at lunch etc.) Teachers may not teach about Satan in class, or about Jesus. But what kids share with ther kids is up to them. |
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Here is some of the Satanic Literature for schoolchildren from the Satanic Temple.
Maybe we need to have a Take Your Satanic Literature to School Day on Thursday, as well? https://thesatanictemple.com/campaigns/religious-literature-for-schools/ |
First of all, there SHOULD be little time in a school day for kids to “educate” others on their religion. Now, whether there is or not would depend upon the quality of the school and the teacher. Secondly, if another student were trying to educated one of my kids about their religion, I think my kids are strong enough in their knowledge of Christianity to have a decent discussion with someone of another religion. Are you worried one of your kids may be “converted?" |
Why were the tax payers forced to fund foot baths for muslims at a public Michigan University? |
Do tell . . . |
Anyone can pray silently at any time, so I'm not sure how the school (or anyone) could stop that.
So we're allowed the free exercise of religion and speech, but only when you say so? Thank God you didn't write the Constitution. |
Well, Wednesday would have done as well, since Rosh Hashanah ended at sundown tonight (Tuesday). So while I don't think bibles belong at school except in a private study club -- no proselytizing -- let's not assume the worst without some evidence of motive. |
I don't know, PP. I am also Jewish and sensitive to this issue. I would flatly oppose the school sponsoring this event or giving it a forum. But if individual kids do it on their own time -- like at lunch or after school -- even if the idea was suggested by an outside group, I do not really see the harm. Kids have to learn to cope with dissent eventually. Unless you live in a majority Jewish area like parts of Long Island, most Jewish kids are quite aware from a young age that they are not in the majority. You can't protect them forever. Better to give them tools to protect themselves. It's like anything else someone tells you at school -- a scary story, warnings about kidnappers, Santa Claus, tooth fairy, whatever. You come home and ask your parents, and they correct or explain whatever you were told. I don't know how kids of different religions can be expected to get along and respect each others' view if they are protected from ever hearing about views that are different. And for what it's worth, I did not grow up in a very Jewish area, and in fact went to a Christian day school. So I was exposed to this from the age of 6. I survived my classmates' sidelong looks and questions about why I did not kneel in Chapel or recite the Lord's Prayer or celebrate Christmas, etc etc. If anything it made me identify more strongly as a Jew. |
I personally agree that religion is a private matter, but respect the fact that Christian kids have the(virtually) absolute constitutional right to exercise their religion. Their rights trump your sensitivities. The same principle protects Muslims wearing headscarves, Orthodox Jews's payots, and the smart-aleck Satanists in this thread. Just as with free speech, the principle is sound even if it occasionally makes us uncomfortable. |
Bravo! The country needs more people like you. |
What you are proposing is unconstitutional. Children bringing bibles to school is NOT unconstitutional. The government shall make no law respecting an establishing of religion or prohibing the free exercise of religion. Constitution 101. |
Bingo. |
+10,000 If a school confiscated a Bible from a student, they would have serious problems. |
It's so sad that someone thinks bringing a Bible to school is unconstitutional and then wants teachers to spread this same wrong message. |