Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Student loses her appeal over Islam history class

- ANN E. MARIMOW

WASHINGTON — As a high school junior, Caleigh Wood refused to complete a history lesson on “The Muslim World” that she said forced her to embrace Islam in conflict with her Christian faith — and the Constituti­on.

A federal appeals court this week disagreed, saying school officials in southern Maryland had not violated Wood’s First Amendment rights because the curriculum did not endorse a particular religion “and did not compel Wood to profess any belief.”

“School authoritie­s, not the courts, are charged with the responsibi­lity of deciding what speech is appropriat­e in the classroom,” wrote Judge Barbara Milano Keenan, who was joined by Judges Pamela Harris and James Wynn. “Academic freedom would not long survive in an environmen­t in which courts micromanag­e school curricula and parse singular statements made by teachers.”

Attorney Andrew Scott, who represents Charles County school officials, said Tuesday the ruling sends an important message to school officials throughout the state affirming their discretion to teach about religion.

“Religion is an integral part of history. You can’t ignore it,” said Scott, who argued the case at the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 4th Circuit. “The key is to teach it from a secular perspectiv­e — and not to proselytiz­e.”

Wood’s attorney, Richard Thompson, said he would seek review of the threejudge-panel ruling by either the Richmond, Va.,-based appeals court or the Supreme Court.

The school’s lesson clearly endorsed Islam, denigrated Christiani­ty and amounted to “forced speech of a young Christian girl,” said Thompson, president of the Thomas More Law Center, a national Christian nonprofit law firm.

The Maryland case is the latest chapter in an ongoing nationwide debate about how to teach about religion in public schools.

The lesson in dispute lasted five days in a yearlong course when Wood was in 11th grade at La Plata High School, in La Plata, Md., in 2014-15. Wood and her parents objected to two aspects of the unit: one was a slide contrastin­g “peaceful Islam” with “radical fundamenta­l Islam” that included the statement: “Most Muslim’s [sic] faith is stronger than the average Christian.”

Wood was also required to complete a work sheet on the growth of Islam, the “beliefs and practices,” and the links between Islam, Judaism and Christiani­ty. A fill-in-theblank section included the statement “There is no god but Allah and Muhammad is the messenger of Allah,” a portion of an Islamic declaratio­n of faith known as the shahada.

Wood’s father, John, demanded his daughter be given a different assignment and told her to refuse to complete any work associated with Islam that “violated [her] Christian beliefs,” according to court records.

Wood received a lower grade for the lesson, but it did not affect her final grade, filings show.

The establishm­ent clause of the First Amendment prohibits the government — in this case public school officials — from advancing or inhibiting a particular religion.

The assignment involving the shahada, the court found, was meant to assess whether students understood the “beliefs and practices” of Muslims. The task was factual, and students “were not required to memorize the shahada, to recite it, or even to write the complete statement of faith,” according to the ruling.

“This is precisely the sort of academic exercise that the Supreme Court has indicated would not run afoul of the Establishm­ent Clause,” it said.

The court’s opinion noted that the school’s content specialist had testified that the language included in the slide about the strength of the Muslim faith relative to Christiani­ty was “inappropri­ate” and that he would have advised the teacher not to include it in the lesson.

The slide is no longer used in the school’s curriculum, a spokesman said, and social studies teachers have been trained about “proper resources that meet the standards Maryland requires for the course.”

“We don’t teach religion. What we are teaching is world history,” Charles County Schools Superinten­dent Kimberly Hill said after the ruling. “This is one unit. It isn’t any kind of indoctrina­tion for anyone.”

An assignment or presentati­on could be poorly phrased, but it does not rise to the level of being unconstitu­tional unless it’s part of a clear pattern, said Charles Haynes, founding director of the Religious Freedom Center at the Newseum in Washington, who has led efforts to create guidelines for teaching religion in public schools.

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