Monday, June 05, 2006

TMLC Seeks Supreme Court Review Of Court Decision Allowing California Public School To Teach Twelve Year-olds How To Become Muslims

ANN ARBOR, MI – The Thomas More Law Center, a national public interest law firm based in Ann Arbor, Michigan, has requested that the United States Supreme Court review the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals’ decision holding that it is constitutional for a California public school to engage in a three week intensive course for seventh graders on how to “become Muslims.”

For three weeks in 2001, impressionable twelve-year-old students were, among other things, placed into Islamic city groups, took Islamic names, wore identification tags that displayed their new Islamic name and the Star and Crescent Moon, which is the symbol of Muslims, were handed materials that instructed them to “Remember Allah always so that you may prosper,” completed the Islamic Five Pillars of Faith, including fasting, and memorized and recited the “Bismillah” or “In the name of God, the Merciful, the Compassionate,” which students also wrote on banners that were hung on the classroom walls.

A California federal trial court and the Ninth Circuit determined that these practices did not violate the Constitution.
There is no violation because "Christianity" is not mentioned or taught...What sort of outcry would there be IF children were placed in a similar "educational" program where they would learn how to "become Christians" or, God forbid, "become Catholics"...

Perhaps parents should take this up with their local school boards and see if, in the name of diversity, a program can be put in place to teach children how to become good Christians. If it works for the Peoples' Republik of Kalifornia, it could work elsewhere.

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