Tuesday, November 24, 2009

Suit Challenges School's Censorship of Anti-Islam T-Shirts

Yesterday the ACLU of Florida filed a federal lawsuit against the Alachua County (FL) school board challenging the constitutionality of the district's policy of banning students from wearing T-shirts with messages that are "offensive to others." The Gainesville Sun reports that the suit, alleging freedom of expression claims, was filed on behalf of two families that are members of the Dove World Outreach Center. School officials asked the students involved to cover their T-shirts which, on the back, read "Islam is of the Devil." On the front, the T-shirts read: "I stand in truth with Dove World Outreach Center", followed by, "Jesus answered I am the way and the truth and the life; no one goes to the Father except through me."

Some students were told they could not wear the T-shirts at all. Others were only required to cover the message on the back, but not the Christian message on the front. The ACLU says the issue is whether, under the First Amendment, school officials can permit positive messages about faith, religion or other matters, while banning negative messages about those subjects. School officials say they can bar messages that are disruptive to the learning environment, substantially interfere with maintaining discipline at school, or which infringe other students' rights.