Liberty Counsel
NEWS RELEASE
Contact: PUBLIC RELATIONS
DEPARTMENT - 800-671-1776
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
May 14, 2007
ACLU
Cannot Force School District to Censor Seniors at Louisiana Graduation
Ouachita,
LA - The graduating seniors at the six high schools in the Ouachita
Parish School District voted to have a fellow student give a message
during this week's graduation ceremonies. Up in arms over the
possibility the students will include religious themes or prayer at
graduation, the ACLU issued a letter accusing the district of "trying
to do an end-run around the Constitution with the so-called student-led
prayers."
The
ACLU wants the district to censor prayer and religious messages from
graduation, even if presented by students. The Louisiana chapter of
the ACLU has intentionally ignored the distinction between school-sponsored
prayer as contrasted with prayer or religious speech that is solely
the decision of the students. In Adler v. Duval County School
Board, Liberty Counsel successfully defended, against the ACLU,
a graduation policy governing student speech. The school district
implemented the legal principle established in the Adler case and,
therefore, permits students to determine whether they want a fellow
student to present a message. If so, the elected student is then permitted
to present a message of his or her own choice.
Mathew
D. Staver, Founder and Chairman of Liberty Counsel and Dean of Liberty
University School of Law, was the lead counsel who successfully defended
against the ACLU in the Adler case. The case went to the
trial court twice, the federal court of appeals five times (twice
before a panel of 12 judges) and to the U.S. Supreme Court twice.
This case recognized that public schools are safe when they adopt
an equal access policy for graduation, where students or other speakers
are permitted to present a secular or religious message of their choice.
Liberty
Counsel's "Friend or Foe" Graduation Prayer Campaign
seeks to educate and, if necessary, litigate to ensure that prayer
and religious views are not suppressed during graduation.
Commenting
on the matter, Staver remarked: "As long as there are graduations,
there will be times when prayer and religious messages are part of
the ceremonies. Religious viewpoints cannot be excluded from graduation
ceremonies. When the message is the choice of the student or the speaker,
religious viewpoints, including prayer, are permissible. The ACLU
is wrong – schools must not censor private religious speech
from graduation."
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