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Muslim, Christian parents rally outside Maryland courthouse for students’ religious rights
Catholic News Agency ^ | August 10, 2023 | Tyler Arnold, Peter Pinedo

Posted on 08/11/2023 5:10:31 AM PDT by DoodleBob

Lawyers for Montgomery County parents argued in court Wednesday morning in defense of the freedom to opt children out of coursework that promotes acceptance of homosexuality and transgenderism. Outside the courthouse more than 50 parents gathered for a rally in support of parents’ and students’ religious rights.

Represented by Becket, a law firm specializing in religious rights cases, a coalition of primarily Muslim, Catholic, and Eastern Orthodox Christian parents are fighting back against the Montgomery County Board of Education for mandating instruction of materials that the parents say conflict with their faith.

Maryland law requires that school districts allow parents to opt out of coursework that deals with “family life and human sexuality.” However, the school district decided in March that it does not consider reading materials that discuss subjects related to homosexuality, transgenderism, and other aspects of gender ideology to be a part of “family life and human sexuality instruction.”

On May 1, the school district stopped notifying parents of such reading materials in the coursework and refused to allow them to opt out.

“Parents are the first teachers,” William Haun, senior counsel at Becket, told CNA. “The point of this lawsuit is to restore the ability to give parents notice and opt out.”

“The school board just took it away without any public explanation,” Haun continued. “The First Amendment protects against arbitrary power, and it protects the right of parents to direct their children’s religious upbringing.”

Parents rally outside courthouse

While oral arguments were being heard inside the Montgomery County federal courthouse, the diverse group of parents rallied for their First Amendment rights.

Grace Morrison, whose 10-year-old foster child has Down syndrome and attends a Montgomery County public school, spoke at the rally about how her child has been exposed to pro-homosexual and transgender materials and is now struggling to understand how her foster parents and teachers can disagree so fundamentally.

“Because of her learning challenges,” Haun explained, “her parents aren’t able to tell her: ‘Your teacher is misunderstanding our religious beliefs’ or ‘This is what we believe as a family.’”

“They can’t have those meaningful conversations with her,” he said. “All their child knows is that her teacher is telling her one thing and her parents are telling her something else. And that kind of disagreement for a child with Down syndrome is disorienting, to put it mildly.”

“Because only Montgomery County Public Schools have the resources to educate this child, this is that family’s [only] option; they have to endure this,” Haun explained. “They have to encounter this. So, this poses a real burden and pressures them to modify their religious beliefs or no longer participate in public education, which would sacrifice their child’s education.”

Parental rights and religious freedom at stake

Lawyers for Becket argued that the policy infringes upon parental rights and religious freedom that are guaranteed in the U.S. Constitution, Maryland law, and even the board’s own policies. The lawyers are asking the court to halt the policy and restore the opt-out before children go back to school on Aug. 28.

“Our society depends on people being able to disagree civilly,” Eric Baxter, vice president and senior counsel at Becket, told CNA after finishing the three-hour hearing with the court.

Baxter said if the school district is trying to promote inclusivity, “you don’t do that by pushing ideological conformity” on parents and students. He said if students are told their religious beliefs are hurtful, they will “feel like the system doesn’t protect them” and encouraged the school district to “simply respect the diversity of opinion that exists on these issues.”

He said many of the questions from the judge related to “whether the parents’ religious beliefs were really burdened” and noted that courts have ruled in favor of a parents’ religious rights in less egregious burdens than this.

Objectionable coursework

The coursework that the parents found objectionable includes reading material geared toward students as young as 3 or 4 years old.

This includes a book called “Pride Puppy!”, which introduces preschoolers and kindergarteners to words like “drag queen,” “leather,” and “zipper” and discusses Marsha B. Johnson, who was a drag queen, a gay rights activist, and temporarily a prostitute. The story follows a young child who is searching for a lost dog at a pride parade and seeks to teach children the alphabet through homosexual and transgender themes.

Baxter said religious parents are seeking to opt their children out of instruction related to this book because it is “introducing children to things that are much more of an adult nature.”

He referenced another book for young children that discusses a child who wants to change genders and includes comments about a mother scolding the child’s brother for not acknowledging the transition, saying: “Doctors only guess what your sex is when you’re born.”

Another book Baxter referenced discusses “falling in love with another child on the playground.” He said the coursework also includes literature at the second-grade level discussing “issues concerning sexuality.”

Baxter argued that the parents he represents do not want their young children engaging in coursework that is “talking about intimate things such as romance on the playgrounds, questioning their pronouns, [and] what it means to be cisgender or transgender.” He said the promotion of these topics is “contrary to [their] religious beliefs” and “causes them to question the religious instruction they’re getting at home.”

CNA reached out to the school district for comment but did not receive a statement by the time of publication.

Immigrant parents rally to cause

Dozens of parents from various religious faiths rallied outside the courthouse to support the effort to reinstate the opt-out for parents.

“Immigrants with diverse faith backgrounds and diverse heritages came to the rally, asking for the very thing that many of them came to the United States for — religious freedom,” a spokesperson for Moms for Liberty of Montgomery County, which was involved in the rally, told CNA.

“This is what our Constitution offers,” the spokesperson said. “In a pluralistic society, we need to love and respect all others, but we don’t have to share their morality. [The lawyers’ request] would temporarily restore the right of parents to opt out of LGBTQIA+ curriculum that directly undermines their faith tradition. We are hoping today that our voices will finally be heard.”

Parental rights groups have been regularly engaging with the school board and holding rallies in support of restoring the opt-out.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: arth; religion

1 posted on 08/11/2023 5:10:31 AM PDT by DoodleBob
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To: DoodleBob

strange bedfellows. I can see the government closing Christian churches and maybe muzzling the muslims ...ignoring them. Or trying.


2 posted on 08/11/2023 5:12:46 AM PDT by Karliner (Heb 4:12 Rom 8:28 Rev 3, "...This is the end of the beginning." Churchill)
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To: DoodleBob

I have to say that I am starting to despise leftists more than Muslims of late. The godless left is bat crap crazy, vicious, and planning genocide to “save the planet” - for themselves.


3 posted on 08/11/2023 5:16:33 AM PDT by wildcard_redneck (The Forever War is a crime against humanity)
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To: Karliner

and maybe muzzling the muslims ...ignoring them. Or trying.

````````````````````````````````````````````````

Top to bottom changing from liberalism to conservatism and maybe trying to muzzle Muzzies. In the foreseeable future, they are a protected class.

Open season year around on heterosexual, Christian White males.


4 posted on 08/11/2023 5:21:03 AM PDT by Graybeard58 (Celebrating 42 years of sobriety this year, thank you Heavenly Father.)
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To: Karliner

I have a fair number of colleagues at work who follow Islam.

There is never a performance or other type of problem with them. They’re pretty normal. Indeed, one hinted that people who emigrated from Iran were somewhat aghast in 2020, basically saying they left their homes because of corrupt elections. And now this. That hurt.

In contrast, there are a fair number of Karens and Brandons who were impossible during the pandemic.


5 posted on 08/11/2023 5:21:10 AM PDT by DoodleBob (Gravity’s waiting period is about 9.8 m/s²)
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To: DoodleBob

Sounds like Mao and the Nationalists getting together to fight the Japanese.


6 posted on 08/11/2023 5:41:20 AM PDT by DIRTYSECRET (e allowed )
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To: DIRTYSECRET

Or Americans of Italian and German descent enlisting in WWII.


7 posted on 08/11/2023 5:52:09 AM PDT by DoodleBob (Gravity’s waiting period is about 9.8 m/s²)
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To: DoodleBob

I was in college during the 444 days. The Shia Persians burned up the Journalism room and stole the typeset when I wrote on the divisiveness between the religious mullahs and the professional engineers and doctors, the forcing of women behind chadors.

There’s a difference there. The radical religionists were slamming the professionals and their women.

Maybe you’re lucky you’re only seeing the professional side but that’s the necessary soft underbelly to the zealots. I do not know if you can muzzle them when they band together.

It’’s obvious and proof the last two years-plus you can close churches and muzzle the Christians.


8 posted on 08/11/2023 6:33:41 AM PDT by Karliner (Heb 4:12 Rom 8:28 Rev 3, "...This is the end of the beginning." Churchill)
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To: DoodleBob

Sad. I went to public elementary school in Maryland in the 1930s and early 1940s before the war. It was kind of a strange school. They didn’t teach us cursive, but what they called manuscript. Every morning we pledged allegiance to the flag, bowed our head and recited the Lord’s Prayer.


9 posted on 08/11/2023 1:31:11 PM PDT by Hiddigeigei ("Talk sense to a fool and he calls you foolish," said Dionysus - Euripides)
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