home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=94TT0375>
- <title>
- Apr. 11, 1994: Is There a Place For God in School?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Apr. 11, 1994 Risky Business on Wall Street
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- RELIGION, Page 60
- Is There a Place For God in School?
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>As crusaders probe for loopholes in past rulings, the Supreme
- Court revisits the issue of church and state
- </p>
- <p>By Richard N. Ostling--Reported by Jeff Hooten/Washington
- </p>
- <p> During a single week last month in the District of Columbia
- public schools, two high school students were shot and seriously
- wounded, another student was stabbed by a sixth-grade girl,
- an assistant principal was punched in the face, and a policeman
- was assaulted by students. Mayor Sharon Pratt Kelly responded
- to the mayhem as big-city mayors often do: she announced plans
- to post 60 more cops on campus. But her predecessor in the job
- is convinced that a higher power is required. Ex-mayor and now
- councilman Marion Barry has proposed a law allowing students
- to lead nonsectarian classroom prayers. "Maybe, just maybe,
- it will turn some of our values around," he says. "We've lost
- our way."
- </p>
- <p> Barry, who served six months in prison for drug possession after
- leaving office as mayor, might seem a curious proponent of piety,
- but his campaign is no oddity. Pressed by voters, legislators
- around the U.S. are probing for loopholes in Supreme Court rulings
- that have forbidden mandated school prayers along with "moments
- of silence" to foster praying and clergy prayers at school graduations.
- These efforts come, moreover, at a time when the court is re-examining
- a cornerstone of its rulings on church and state: the so-called
- Lemon test, which has forbidden virtually all government involvement
- with religion.
- </p>
- <p> The grass-roots campaign to slip prayer back into school is
- aimed at a chink in the Supreme Court's rulings: the court has
- never expressly stated whether voluntary student prayers are
- permissible. A mail campaign spearheaded by TV evangelist and
- onetime presidential candidate Pat Robertson has sent every
- high school principal and attorney general in the nation literature
- urging that such prayers be allowed as an expression of "free
- speech" and "equal access to the marketplace of ideas." (His
- organization does not advocate student prayers on school-wide
- intercoms, the practice that got Mississippi principal Bishop
- Knox suspended.)
- </p>
- <p> Anxiety over a breakdown in the nation's moral values is fueling
- much state legislative activity as well. Georgia just enacted
- a law to permit moments of silence. Student-led prayers have
- been approved in Mississippi, Arkansas, Tennessee and Virginia.
- Similar legislation is under consideration in at least six more
- states. Congress has caught the fever this year as well. Both
- the Senate and House passed measures that would strip funds
- from schools that forbid "voluntary" prayer. Final action on
- prayer legislation is expected this spring.
- </p>
- <p> The American Civil Liberties Union has vowed to challenge the
- constitutionality of these new laws. Representative Don Edwards,
- a California Democrat, argues that student prayer is not really
- voluntary and amounts to "manipulation by churches and parents."
- He points to numerous lower-court decisions against such praying.
- </p>
- <p> A pending high-court decision could change the landscape significantly.
- It revolves around the 1971 Lemon ruling, which bars tax support
- for salaries and secular textbooks in religious day schools.
- The decision set up a three-part test to determine whether a
- government action is an unconstitutional infringement of church-state
- separation: an action must have a "secular legislative purpose,"
- avoid "excessive government entanglement with religion" and
- have a "primary effect" that "neither advances nor inhibits
- religion."
- </p>
- <p> Many legal experts and religious leaders feel that the Lemon
- test is at best confusing, at worst unfair, and in any event
- destined to change. The current challenge has come in the case
- of Kiryas Joel v. Grumet. Kiryas Joel is a municipality in upstate
- New York where virtually all citizens are in the Satmar sect
- of Hasidic Orthodox Jewry. Kiryas Joel adheres rigidly to Old
- World dress and ways and maintains a close-knit, Yiddish-speaking
- community that tries to shield itself from outside influences.
- TV, movies and even higher education are shunned.
- </p>
- <p> The children in town attend religious day schools with no government
- support. The dispute centers on the town's handicapped youngsters.
- They used to be trained by public school teachers at an annex
- to a religious school; then, in 1985, the Supreme Court decided
- that Lemon forbids such cooperation. After busing the handicapped
- kids to an existing public school for several years, the Satmar
- parents, seeking to shield the children from harassment, set
- up their own local public school, where costly special education
- is made possible by state and federal aid.
- </p>
- <p> Kiryas Joel says its public school for the handicapped operates
- in a strictly nonsectarian fashion. Opponents, led by Louis
- Grumet, executive director of the New York State School Boards
- Association, do not argue that point. But they say Lemon forbids
- the very existence of a school set up by the state legislature
- specifically to help a religious community and perpetuate its
- life-style. New York's highest court outlawed the school because
- it creates a "symbolic union" between religion and the state.
- The Supreme Court last week heard arguments in Kiryas Joel's
- appeal.
- </p>
- <p> Some scholars believe the time is ripe for the Lemon test to
- be modified or overturned. Four Supreme Court Justices have
- soured on Lemon. Two prominent legal experts who filed "friend
- of the court" briefs expressed dissatisfaction with Lemon: Michael
- McConnell of the University of Chicago, backing the Satmars
- on behalf of Evangelical Protestants, and Douglas Laycock of
- the University of Texas, opposing the Satmars on behalf of the
- more liberal National Council of Churches.
- </p>
- <p> McConnell and Laycock assert that Lemon's "primary-effect" criterion
- (the one used to outlaw the Kiryas Joel school) is too fuzzy
- and has been misused to deny religious Americans rights that
- are automatically granted to others. The Supreme Court has already
- overruled lower courts that used the primary-effect criterion
- to outlaw voluntary religious clubs in public schools, rental
- of public schools to churches on the same basis as other community
- groups, and help for blind and deaf students attending religious
- schools.
- </p>
- <p> McConnell advocates what he calls "substantive neutrality,"
- in which courts would allow government to accommodate religious
- activity if its policy is "religion-blind" and does not "induce
- or favor" belief. Laycock, observing that "it is rarely possible
- for government to achieve absolutely no effect on religion,"
- argues that to find neutrality, courts should balance the benefit
- to religion stemming from a government action, against the repression
- of belief that would result if government did the opposite.
- </p>
- <p> The attorney who argued for the Satmars, Nathan Lewin, contends
- that the Supreme Court will ultimately have to decide: "Is religion
- a positive force in American society, or is it a menace?" His
- opponent, educator Grumet, asserts that if the court decides
- in the Satmars' favor, "the entire underpinning of the public
- school system would be undermined." Harvard law professor Alan
- Dershowitz, a strong supporter of church-state separation, is
- uncharacteristically ambivalent on Kiryas Joel. "It's a close
- case," he says. Close, and for the always delicate relations
- between church and state, potentially momentous.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-