Objective coverage of church-state and religious liberty developments, with extensive links to primary sources.
Saturday, October 22, 2005
Indiana School Attempts To Accommodate Muslim Children
At last week's Porter Township, Indiana school board meeting, a number of parents raised objections to the way in which Porter Lakes Elementary School is attempting to deal with the enrollment for the first time of two Muslim children. The NWI Times today reports that the school set aside a room in which the Muslim children could pray, rather than forcing them to go to a corner of the cafeteria where other students might laugh at them or humiliate them. Some parents argued that this was unjustified favoritism. However, David Emmert, general counsel for the Indiana School Board Association, said that this kind of religious accommodation is required by law. The school also held a mini-assembly for the second and third grade about Muslim culture. The school defends this under it curriculum standards that call for discussion of different cultural traditions. Some parents objected that this amounted to teaching of religion because Islam was discussed as being intertwined with Muslim cultural traditions.