Posted on 02/19/2009 6:58:12 PM PST by Coleus
WAYNE Rola Awwad wants a private space for her 10-year-old son at Albert Payson Terhune Elementary School to exercise his right to Muslim prayer.
The school district had offered to let him pray at recess either outside or in a classroom while classmates are there. And that, says Awwad, is "unacceptable." mAll students are constitutionally guaranteed the right to pray during the school day as long as it doesn't interfere with learning. But Wayne is struggling with what accommodations to make if a Muslim student requests privacy for prayer. The answer in other North Jersey districts ranges from providing access to the principal's office, to providing a spare room. But school administrators in suburban Wayne have been weighing the question since fall, when Awwad asked the principal to allow her son, Adam, a few minutes of privacy each afternoon to pray. The district says it's concerned about allowing a young pupil to be unsupervised, even for a short time, and Awwad said her request was met with resistance.
"Why can't he be on his own for five minutes praying?" said Awwad, a Palestinian who moved to the United States from Jordan 11 years ago. She said it's important to her that her children go to public school and make diverse friends. But she also wants them to be able to practice their religion. "All I want from the school is to let my son pray in a private place in a small room, say his prayer and go back to class," she said.
Muslims pray five times a day to reaffirm their faith and submit to follow divine commandments. The prayer is said during prescribed times; in the fall, when the clocks roll back at the end of daylight savings time, the afternoon prayer must be said during the school day, Awwad explained. Federal guidelines say schools can't prevent students from praying during school hours, but schools can't sponsor religious activities or lead students in prayer. But the guidelines don't provide specifics on how schools should handle requests like Awwad's. And because that's left to the discretion of school administrators, North Jersey districts have responded with a hodgepodge of approaches.
In Passaic, an elementary school student is allowed to pray privately in a classroom storage closet, Superintendent Robert Holster said. A middle school principal in Cliffside Park allows a student to pray in her office, Superintendent Michael Romagnino said. If an elementary school child wanted a private place to pray, the superintendent said he would ask the principal to make an accommodation in an available office. And Teaneck High School sets aside a room where Muslim students are allowed to go and say their prayers, said district spokesman Dave Bicofsky. Wayne's district does not even have a consistent approach among its schools, The Record found in interviews with parents and the administration.
Awwad said when she first made her request, she was advised to pick up Adam at lunch and take him out of school to say prayers, which she has done for the last several months. When she pressed to have him allowed to pray in the building, the district offered to let Adam pray outside during lunch, or in the classroom during recess when the weather was bad. But another elementary school principal in the district had offered to let a student pray in an office. School board Attorney John Croot said the district thought it had made an "acceptable accommodation" when it offered to let Muslim students pray outside during lunch, or inside in a classroom in days of bad weather. He said the district is trying to strike a balance between constitutional principles.
For school officials, the issue is complicated by the degree of religious practice: For instance, federal guidelines specifically mention a student's right to quietly read the Bible during lunch. But the guidelines are not clear on what a district should do when the expression of religion is more demonstrative, as it is in Adam's case. "Then you are talking about a public school district,'' Croot said. "You have to carefully weigh the constitutional issues. It's a balance between the free exercise of religion and the concept of the separation of church and state. It's a public school district and you have to consider those constitutional issues.'' Croot said he sought guidance from the U.S. Department of Education and was advised the district should have a consistent approach.
Awwad told the district in a letter that its latest accommodation "is unacceptable." Her son would have to put his prayer mat and touch his forehead on the damp ground if he prayed outside. And she said Adam was worried that other students would ridicule him if he prayed in the classroom. Croot said "nothing has been foreclosed yet. We are still in discussions. We have indicated one possible accommodation that would have been acceptable, but there may be other accommodations that we could reach."
We Christians just flee the public school system....while our tax dollars keep paying for this insanity.
And I'm sure the muslims in Canada often spare a moment to be thankful for the multicultural tolerance and accommodating spirit of the gentle people of the country that welcomed them.
Snort.
Well, I am headed to hell too, being an infidel. How many virgins do we get in Muslim hell?
Are there any jews in his class?
God forbid....
Don’t know. Let’s ask Mohammed Atta and his friends.
Sorry, the Jewish children need a place to pray also!
Back in the 70s I would on occasion be transported around the Indonesian oil patch on an Indonesian work boat with an Indonesian crew. One of the crew would pray regularly. He would check the compass, roll out his prayer rug and do what he did. No one paid him any mind or ever said anything. Everyone went about their business as did he.
This parent is full of crap.
How about a nice holy outhouse — most are already marked with the crescent and have a place to wash feet.
62 Point View Pkwy
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I hear the bottom of the Mariana Trench is lovely this time of year.
They could always home school.
Tell us how these kinds of accommodations are working out for you.
One has to wonder what accommodations for Christians are made in Jordan. - Not much, I'd bet.
Yeah...a place to pray the little Muzzie's family & friends don't blow them up, saw their heads off, burn their house down, rape them, or....
BINGO!
I’ll donate my toilet bowl - the brainwashed zombie can climb in there and pray.
It’s got a picture of mohammed painted at the bottom of the bowl with a big smile on his face, welcoming the gifts people shower upon him.
Is there a lawyer here somewhere — would my mohammed toilet bowl constitute a “hate crime” in this Orwellian twilight zone we used to call “America?”
Or would the “poop on mohammed’s face” toilet bowl just express the fact that I’ve grown weary of moslems murdering people yet acting hyper-sensitive when they’re called on it?
Also, if there’s a patent attorney around here, do you think KOHLER would consider manufacturing a “Poop On Mohammed’s Face” line of toilets?
Excellent observation!
I’m drawing a cluster diagram. These words have all sorts of connections:
OBAMA — MONKEYS — DIAPERS — MOSLEMS
ok forget that the religion in question is trying to take over our country and replace our Constitution with Sharia law. Forget they kill millions of people every year. Forget they don’t even allow our bibles into their countries.
Forget all that stuff.
Schools design all their processes so that kids aren’t allowed to be alone. They’ve been sued many times when that happens. Kids get hurt when that happens. They have hundred of kids to keep track of.
I say let his mom eat pork rinds.
I’m truly amazed by this. Teaneck officials said just today that religion has no place in their public schools:
http://www.northjersey.com/education/twosidestoeverystory/39896427.html
perhaps they’re finally admitting that islam is political/military activism group and not a religion.
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