Posted on 03/23/2007 5:09:23 AM PDT by Ellesu
TIVERTON The Easter Bunny was to have made a stop at a craft fair at the Tiverton Middle School tomorrow, appearing for photos with students as part of a fundraising effort sponsored by the schools Parent-Teacher Council.
But Schools Supt. William Rearick called a halt to the use of the word Easter at a school event, just as the word Christmas is out of bounds in school publications and activities.
Instead of the Easter Bunny, the Parent-Teacher Council booth will offer photos with Peter Rabbit.
Similarly, Rearick said, he has told officials of the Tiverton Land Trust that a flier inviting children to an egg hunt cannot include the word Easter.
Rearick said he planned to review the proposed wording which a Land Trust official said does not include the word Easter before deciding whether students can take the flier home. Rearick said yesterday, Were trying to walk a fine line between promoting any religion while permitting celebrations.
I dont like the term politically correct, Rearick said, but during the last year and a half or two years, he has become more aware of folks who dont have a Christian background.
He said he has made it a practice to be careful of not trying to promote one particular religion in the schools.
For example, he said, the schools have spring vacation, not Easter vacation.
He said two members of the School Committee, Jan Bergandy and Leonard Wright, are drafting a proposal for a written policy intended to keep the schools on neutral ground when it comes to religious holidays. The proposal will be aired publicly and will be submitted for a vote of the committee, Rearick said.
Such a policy presumably would have to address events such as the Tiverton High School annual Christmas Concert, which was promoted last December, among other venues, in the newsletter of the Walter E. Ranger Elementary School under the headline "Christmas Celebrations."
Rearick nixed the Easter Bunny in response to a complaint from Burk, vice chairman of the School Committee.
Burk said yesterday that the appearance of an Easter Bunny at a school event would violate federal prohibitions against the public schools soliciting or encouraging religious activities or participating in such activities.
Elsewhere, similar government bans on the Easter Bunny and Easter egg hunts have become fodder for critics who say theres nothing religious about these symbols. But Burk, who volunteered that he was raised as a Roman Catholic, said that the Easter Bunny has been part of Easter celebrations as long as he can remember. Without Easter, there would be no Easter Bunny, he said.
Jessica Caldwell, president of the Parent-Teacher Council, said she did not object to Rearicks request that the group switch from the Easter Bunny to Peter Rabbit at tomorrows craft fair.
I really dont see this as a problem. Its really to be more sensitive to the religions, she said.
Laura Epke, a member of the board of directors of the Tiverton Land Trust, said she had no objection to omitting the word Easter from the flier about the egg hunt.
Elsewhere in the country, the Easter Bunny and the Easter egg hunt have not evaporated as quietly.
A resident of Walnut Creek, Calif., struck a nerve when he wrote a letter to the editor of an area newspaper about a month ago lambasting the decision of town officials to rename the annual Easter egg hunt as a spring egg hunt featuring the spring bunny.
It didnt matter that the decision had been made five years ago, or that Walnut Creek was not alone among area communities that had edited the word Easter out of their springtime childrens events.
Michael Runzlers remark that an Easter egg hunt is about as religious as drinking beer on St. Patricks Day or giving roses on St. Valentines Day got him a spot on Fox News, which was picked up on Comedy Central television in a parody headlined Attack on Easter.
Last year, St. Paul, Minn., was lampooned nationwide after its human rights director ordered an Easter rabbit and a Happy Easter sign removed from City Hall.
Here we go -
Easter
Christmas
St. Valentine's Day
niggardly
refugee
alien
tar baby
tar-and-feather
blackguard
mumbo-jumbo
Jemima
Uncle Ben
Apple Brown Betty
Natural family
Marriage
family values
The Lord's Work
God bless you
There used to be a dance called the Black Bottom but since nobody is complaining about it I won't put it in the list.
So who's going to run the "Spring Festival" and "Spring Play" for the "Spring Holiday"?
ROFL!
I read the ACLU sued to remove a cross from the LA city seal but left in the image of a pagan "gxdess." Don't these stupid liberals know that the name "e*ster" comes from the name of a pagan Germanic spring "gxdess" and ultimately from the Babylonian "gxdess" isht*r? They're supressing paganism! How dare they! What do they think this country is, a chr*stian theocracy??? [/sarcasm]
Don Feder once wrote an article quoting an atheist who ridiculed Fundamentalist chr*stians for attacking the "e*ster bunny." Guess the ACLU-nics are "chr*stian fundies" now!
I'm sorry, but it's totally disingenuous to pass off "Easter Bunny" and "Easter" as "nothing to do with Christianity" when we KNOW it IS associated with Christianity and nothing else.
We KNOW today Easter eggs and bunnies and the name itself are meant for CHRISTIANITY. I don't care about the origins, they are dead as dust. If it weren't for Christianity, we would not have Easter egg hunts and Easter baskets filled by the Easter bunny, because it became associated with Christianity (in the past, yes) and THAT is the reason our society uses these things.
They DO NOT use them historically because of an ancient pagan rite.
So it's a bad argument to defend Easter bunnies and the like by claiming it "has nothing to do with Christianity". That's total BS, as another poster said about PC.
But I guess that is too much to ask.
Ah, but you see, liberals divide the American populations into "host" and "guests." Then, in order to demonstrate their oppeness to the latter, they suppress any and all public expressions of the faith of the former and then publicly fund as many public expressions of the latter as they can find. Then, after they have publicly thanked every "gxd" in the human imagination except the chr*stian one (and of course, HaShem), they congratulate themselves for proving that the US is a non-religious, secular state!
Do you suppose if the Irish were historically Republican (er, in the American, not the Irish sense) that St. Patrick's Day would be celebrated by so many city governments with public parades and such like?
What am I to call that plant that we grow on the farm then? Bolls of a fibrous, white substance used for making cloth?
Garde la Foi, mes amis! Nous nous sommes les sauveurs de la République! Maintenant et Toujours!
(Keep the Faith, my friends! We are the saviors of the Republic! Now and Forever!)
LonePalm, le Républicain du verre cassé (The Broken Glass Republican)
How about using "Peter the Pig".
Sweet possibly existent deity, you are really pushing the old envelope. If Hillary is ever elected ... to anything ... you will wind up behind barbed wire in a re-education camp.
Suggest "non-reflective hindquarter coordinated step exercise."
Oh, wait... you can't say that! Sorry.
"Show me just what Mohammed brought that was new, and there you will find things only evil and inhuman, such as his command to spread by the sword the faith he preached." - Manuel II Palelologus
Don't forget - "articulate."
At this rate in a few years it will be called the 'Allahu Akbar mini turbin hunt' and only boys will be able to participate.
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