No limits on prayer in school . . . for Muslims?
Washington Times: Schools loosen limits on prayers---
CLIFFSIDE PARK, N.J. (AP) -- Yasmeen Elsamra had a simple request: While her classmates were eating lunch, she wanted to go off by herself for a few moments to pray.How nice for them. Too bad they won't allow the same religious freedoms for Christians. After all, this country was founded as a Christian nation.
The 14-year-old was told she couldn't, and went home distraught that afternoon in October 2003. Praying five times a day is a cornerstone of her Muslim faith.
"If I wasn't allowed to pray my second prayer at school, I couldn't do it at home," she said. "When school finishes, the third prayer begins."
Her family contacted the District-based Council on American-Islamic Relations, which asked the school district to reconsider. Eventually, the school district acknowledged it had no policy preventing a student from praying during free time, and allowed Yasmeen to use an empty classroom to unfurl her prayer rug, face Mecca and touch her head to the floor in a few moments of worship.
Her case was part of a nationwide grass-roots effort by Muslim parents to make public schools more friendly and accommodating to Muslim students. The movement has gained strength since the September 11 terror attacks.
"The reality for many Muslim students in public schools is very difficult," said Ingrid Mattson, vice president of the Islamic Society of North America. "It's highly stressful."
She said her children were sometimes taunted in their Connecticut school district.
"The kids will say 'Hey Osama, do you have a bomb? Are you going to blow us up?'?" she said.
Some school districts are starting to take notice. A zero-tolerance policy on harassment of Muslim students was adopted by Florida's Broward County school board in March 2003.
Paterson, N.J., home of the state's largest Arab-American community, lets some students out of class early Fridays to attend prayers with their parents' permission, and is one of a handful of New Jersey districts that closes schools for Eid al-Fitr, a Muslim religious holiday.
"You're seeing a lot of schools becoming more sensitive this way," said Michael Yaple, a spokesman for the New Jersey School Boards Association.
Imagine a group of students asking to hold a rosary in a school room. They would be turned down.
And even at my alma mater, Gonzaga University, officials at the Law School refused to recognize a student Christian pro-life group because the group wanted to allow only Christians in the leadership. The students did not want someone who did not believe in the sanctity of life to be in a position of control over the club. And Gonzaga is supposedly a Catholic university.
You can read more about it here.
This is unacceptable.
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