Posted on 12/13/2009 7:30:38 AM PST by markomalley
Fifteen-year-old Katarina Keen won't sing along to "Silent Night" or "Listen to the Stars," two Christian songs planned for her choir's upcoming Christmas concert at Borger High School. But she will sing "Jingle Bells" and "A Carol in Winter."
Katarina and her family are Wiccan.
The Borger High choirs have given a concert every December, with traditional religious Christmas songs, but this is the first time in director Johnny Miller's 23-year career that any Borger student had issues with the religious themes in the music, he said.
A concert at 2:30 p.m. Sunday will feature a ninth- and 10th-grade choir and an 11th- and 12th-grade choir, with each ensemble singing five songs. The concert will take place in the Borger High auditorium.
"We're doing our best to accommodate everyone's wishes," Miller said. "It's just difficult, because it's a complete 180 of what I have always done."
Every year, in communities across the nation, Christmas activities in public schools spur conversations regarding religion in schools, said Charles Haynes, a First Amendment scholar who has spent 20 years helping communities find common ground.
"Many Americans understand that a lot is at stake on how we handle religion in public schools," said Haynes, senior scholar at the First Amendment Center in Washington, D.C.
Students began preparing in October for the concert in Borger, and Katarina said Miller had planned for the choir to sing Christian songs. She and her mother, Jean Keen, told Miller she couldn't sing those songs because she's Wiccan.
The Keens also have raised concerns this year about prayers in class and a prayer board posted in the choir room.
Miller said he gave students permission to lead prayers in class Mondays, at their request. The prayer board was a student-led activity, he said. Miller revamped the concert to include a wider variety of secular songs for the holiday season.
As a Wiccan family, the Keens worship Mother Earth.
"We don't believe in Satanism," Jean Keen said. "We worship trees, the solstices."
Wicca began in the early 19th century as a religion that emphasizes growth through harmony in diversity, knowledge, wisdom and exploration, according to a Web site for the Church and School of Wicca.
While their Christian peers in Borger celebrate Christmas, the Keens are preparing for one of eight Wiccan holidays, the Yule, in celebration of the winter solstice Dec. 21.
"It's not a very pushy religion," Katarina said. "It's really easy to worship. We accept everyone, and we don't diss anyone. We don't put any other religion down. We accept them while other people just judge them."
The music selected for the Borger choir concert is standard choral literature, even though some pieces are religious in content, said Miller, a member of the Texas Music Educators Association and the Texas Choral Directors Association. The choir has produced all-state singers, choral directors and garnered awards in concert performance and sight-reading from the University Interscholastic League.
"Choral music has its roots in the church. In order to teach it accurately, you have to teach it from whence it came," Miller said. "I teach the foundation or the building blocks so these students can go out with a well-rounded foundation in choral music."
Some school districts have staged concerts that mirror a church service, while others have excluded religious content entirely, Haynes said. Either scenario can result in conflict, the former creating a potential issue with the First Amendment and the latter producing a community backlash.
The better solution is to make a "good-faith attempt" to teach religious material in the context of discussing cultures and traditions, being careful not to promote a particular theology, Haynes said. Schools also should provide a reasonable, limited opt-out policy that is specific to certain songs or a lesson, he said.
"Sometimes being religious comes with a price, and it makes the student feel like an outsider," he said. "A school cannot avoid all of that. A family has to make a decision what kind of school environment they want. In a public school, (there are) certain things a child is exposed to."
Randall High School's choir concert Sunday will include "Of the Father's Love Begotten," "Jesu Bambino" and an arrangement of "Deck the Halls," director Marcus Bradford said. The choir will end, per tradition, with the "Hallelujah Chorus" from Handel's "Messiah."
"I try to vary styles of literature, sacred and secular literature," Bradford said. "We're not teaching a theology of anything. We're really teaching music history and culture."
In Borger, Katarina won't have to sing compositions that are counter to her faith, Superintendent Clifton Stephens said.
"We've bent over backwards to be cooperative with (the family)," Stephens said. "We've always taken time to listen to concerns they have."
For Katarina, though, the experience this year in choir isn't the fun class she had envisioned, where she would learn songs in a team environment.
"This is school and not church," she said. "I was the one kid that stood out."
I agree. While I pray that she and her family will one day become Christians, I have no problem with her sitting out songs with lyrics that contradict her beliefs. In fact, I don’t particularly want unbelievers singing Christian songs, as it can serve to diminish their significance.
These days it seems more common for the Wiccan, Muslim, atheist or whatever to insist that the whole choir refrain from signing Christian songs, stifling Christian expression in the name of “Freedom of Religion”.
This girl is doing it the right way, not seeking to impose her beliefs on everyone else, and I respect her for it.
However....The solution is complete separation of **SCHOOL** and state.
If our Founding Father could have envisioned the creation of government k-12 schooling I believe they would have included complete separation of school and state in our federal and state constitutions.
First, all schools must choose between a godless or God-centered worldview. Neither is religiously neutral in content or consequences. When government runs K-12 schools it **will** indoctrinate children into one of these two religiously non-neutral worldviews ( either godless or God-centered).
Second, **all** schools must restrict First Amendment Rights. When government chooses to run schools it **will** trample the parent, child, and taxpayer's rights to free speech, press, assembly, and establishment of either a godless or God-centered religious worldview.
It is **impossible** for any government school to be religiously neutral! No school is. It is axiomatic.
There is only **ONE** solution! We must begin to move to a completely private system of universal K-12 education.
Do you think everyone who posts here to FR is a supermodel just because they may be a Christian?
Judgmental and insulting. You are a credit to your religion.
Intolerant witch...
There are plenty of others.
You mean something to stir up warm family memories of disembowling small animals and dancing naked around the sacrificial fire while calling up the lord of darkness?
* uncomfortable silence *
; )
I agree, except, these days, when a member of a minority religion excercises her constitutional rights, while respecting the rights of others to exercise theirs it IS newsworthy.
Hey, I saw the picture. I don’t need to know them to determine their level of attractiveness. Nothing to do with my religion, or theirs for that matter. And speaking of judgmental, you need to quit inferring things I didn’t imply, if you know what I mean.
My goodness she looks 30. Poor girl is so misguided. This picture is the second most ugliest family picture on Free Republic...the first is DEFINITELY the Huckster family...what a pity how ugly that family is. Had Huckster won the Presidency, we would have been the laughingstock around the world no doubt.
Check this out:
The Alliance for the Separation of School and State:
http://www.schoolandstate.org/home.htm
Wiccan’s (witches) don’t worship Satan?
They are delusional if they think that!
You don’t need to justify your comments to me. You might want to talk them over with your Preacher/Pastor though...
I guess you DIDN’T know what I meant.
They respect everyone but will not sing Christmas songs even though she practiced them for months......huh? I don’t like witches.
Not in name they do not. However if all things are created by Jehova, even beings like Satan or other lesser deities, then even fluffy-headed Wiccans are still worshiping God.
Never mind. Have a nice life...
I could guess what the family looked like before getting to the pic. Wiccan is synonymous with pastey, fat and ugly.
That may be true in a parochial sense.
But definitely not in a ‘common’ sense!
Either way. It still isn’t what I would consider ‘news’ worthy!
It’s more of a ‘look at me! look at me!’ kind of story.
Self serving and gratuitous!
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