A family from Maryland claims that their public high school violated
the students First Amendment rights by requiring them to study Islam as part of
a World History course. World History is a required course mandated by the
Maryland State Department of Education. One of the topics is called “Muslim
World” in the unit on Middle Eastern Empires. The Muslim World curriculum was
"designed to explore, among other things, formation of Middle Eastern
empires including the basic concepts of the Islamic faith and how it 'along
with politics, culture, economics, and geography contributed to the development
of those empires.” One of the assignments was to complete a fill in the blank
worksheet on the “Five Pillars of Islam” and the Plaintiff argues that she was
being compelled to confess the Shahada. Students were not
required to memorize or even recite the Shahada. The students were
taught factual, Islam related material, including the relevant continents,
biographical information about the Prophet Muhammad, and the fact that Muslims,
Christians and Jews all trace their ancestry to Abraham. The Plaintiffs
emphasized a single inappropriate statement made by the teacher who told his
class that the faith of most Muslims is “stronger than the average Christian.”
The Plaintiffs argued that the purpose of the comparative faith statement was
to advance religion.
This case is similar to but different from Edwards
v. Aguillard. Here the court found that teaching creationism
along with evolution did not have a secular purpose due to the legislative
history. Instead, the purpose was “to discredit evolution by counterbalancing
its teaching at every turn with the teaching of creationism, a religious
belief.” Teaching about religion in public high school absolutely has a secular
purpose. The separation of church and state does not forbid learning about
religion in the public school curriculum. Teaching students basic religious
literacy about the major faiths of the world can help improve interfaith dialogue
and understanding when done properly. Also, there was no suggestion that anyone
from the school board or the teacher held any bias for or against religion, or
that the explanation of the curriculum was a cover up for a
religiously-motivated purpose like that in Edwards.
Since this is an Establishment Clause issue
I will run it through the Lemon Test from Lemon
v. Kurtzman to determine if the class is
unconstitutional.
The Plaintiffs argue that the statement has
no secular purpose because it doesn’t teach any verifiable and objective facts
about Islam. In the context of the class, the statement is not entirely
motivated by a purpose to advance religion. It not only doesn’t attack any
religious belief, but the statement was given by Mr. Bryden who is a Christian.
The fact that the statement was made by a Christian negates the possibility
that its purpose was to advance the Islamic faith.
The effect of the statement was not seen as
the school endorsing a religion. No one drew the conclusion that because
Muslim’s purportedly have a stronger faith the school views Islam as a superior
religion. A single reference to a Muslim’s strength of faith does not mean that
the Defendants have endorsed Islam. Since the Plaintiffs are devout Christians,
they found the statement offensive but that does not warrant an Establishment
Clause violation.
The statement also did not create any
entanglement between government and religion. First off, the school didn’t rely
on any Muslim clergy to deliver the material. Furthermore, the Defendants did
not provide any direct benefit to Muslims, did not aid Muslims, and did not
suggest any relationship between the school and any Islamic organization. Both
the curriculum and the comparative faith statement therefore survive all three
prongs of the Lemon Test.
I think it is clear that the purpose of
this World History class is to teach *about* religion and not to advance
religion in anyway. It is very different from Bible study courses that some
school districts have instituted that courts find unconstitutional. These
courses are unconstitutional because they teach the Bible as religious truth
and are designed to instill in a particular religious sentiment. In contrast,
the World History course is critical of religion and not devotional. I also
don’t think there is an issue with the fact that this is a mandatory course for
all 11th graders throughout the state of Maryland. The course does not compel
anyone to express certain views, rather students are learning basic religious
literacy. Therefore, I think that the court was right to dismiss the claims
that this course violated the First Amendment rights of the students.
5 comments:
I agree. If the Lemon Test is applied, it is very difficult to make a compelling argument that this fails any of the prongs. This clearly has a secular purpose, being a broad education about many different cultures, which is especially applicable in a world history class. This study does not advance nor inhibit religion in any way, shape, or form. Finally, there is no excessive entanglement. It does not sound like this was the only religion being studied in the class either, so if the plaintiffs are going to file a complaint against study of Islamic topics, they might as well file complaints about each religion studied in the class.
This lawsuit is nearly identical to my first blog post of the semester involving a mother suing the Chatham New Jersey Public School District for requiring students to watch videos about the 5 pillars of Islam. I too used the Lemon Test to determine that teaching about Islam in a public school is far from an endorsement or establishment of religion. I agree with Blake that this lawsuit will fail due to the facts and evidence of the case and the course having a secular purpose.
I fail to see an issue on the teachers part. There is no coercion, government entanglement, force of belief, or establishment. The comment on Muslims being more devout is a little off, and may be worth an objection, but it is not worthy of a court case, possibly a school meeting, as there is no violation of the First Amendment in secular teaching of religion without intent to spread or convert to their beliefs.
Islam has had a substantial effect on history and constitutes the faith of 1.8 billion people worldwide, thus it is taught in many history classes. Islam is also a religion. I don't see any issue with a class teaching students about religion. Despite the claims of the parent, imparting knowledge is very different from coercion. The class wasn't told to accept Mohammed as their prophet, they were taught about the fundamental principles of the religion. The content of the unit comes nowhere near failing any of the three prongs of the Lemon Test, irregardless of whether it offended someone or not.
It is important for public schools to remain neutral not just amongst religion and non-religion but also amongst different religions. I am in agreement with Blake and the rest of my fellow commenters. It seems ignorant of the plaintiffs to be offended by facts and deny the secular purpose of learning any aspect of another religion.
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