At Carillon Elementary School in Seminole County Florida, teachers on
cafeteria duty weren't monitoring lunch; they were out
to lunch on students'
rights. When the daughter of Marcos Perez bowed her head to pray, a teacher
interrupted her and said, "You're not allowed to do that." The
five-year-old looked surprised and responded, "But it's good to
pray." No, said the teacher, "It's not good." Fox News's Todd
Starnes reports that the little girl tried to pray
again but was stopped.
When she got home and explained what
happened, Marcos and his wife were furious. "My five-year old should not
feel conflicted about prayer with respect to trying to follow rules or
authority. We remain speechless that our daughter had to experience [that] from
an individual with an agenda." They contacted the school, demanding to
know why his five-year-old would be accosted for exercising her religious
rights. The principal promised to investigate, but when she asked around, no
teacher remembered the incident. Either way, she assured the Perezes that she
took the matter seriously. "Please know that students are permitted to
pray during school. I will remind all staff members of this." A spokesman
at Florida's Seminole County Public Schools echoed the policy, which allows
prayer as long as it isn't disruptive.
For the Perezes, who were already frustrated
over the liberal indoctrination taking place in classrooms around the country,
this was the last straw. They pulled their daughter out of public education and
have decided to homeschool her. "This definitely pushed us over,"
Marcos said. "We've long had concerns about Common Core and issues and
agendas we see in the culture war."
Unfortunately, liberals have worked long and
hard to convince teachers that students have the right to exercise their
religion -- just not on school property. But that's not true. In fact, the
Constitution and U.S. Supreme Court both say that educators should protect the rights of religious students, so
long as they aren't coercive or disruptive. And that includes praying over
lunch. For the longest time, the Left pushed for religious neutrality in
schools. But over time, that neutrality has turned into outright hostility --
and children are the victims. Of all the ways kids can misbehave these days,
scolding them for praying is about as ridiculous as it gets. Judging by the
state of our culture (and our schools), they could use more time with God --
not less!
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