The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Lawsuit: Teacher allegedly called student ‘terrorist’

Mother files federal complaint against a LaFayette High educator.

- By Martha Dalton martha.dalton@ajc.com

The mother of a Walker County high school student said Tuesday that she has filed a federal complaint after a teacher allegedly called her son a “terrorist.”

Sarah Hall was accompanie­d by members of the Georgia chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) at a news conference in front of the U.S. Education Department’s Office for Civil Rights in downtown Atlanta. The organizati­on says the teacher, Perry Fouts, violated Title VI of the federal Civil Rights Act, which protects people from discrimina­tion based on race, color or national origin. Hall’s son, James Darraj, is Palestinia­n American.

Fouts, a Career, Technical and Agricultur­al Education teacher at LaFayette High School in northwest Georgia, taught Darraj’s former girlfriend, CAIR-Georgia said. Fouts made the comment when he approached the girl and her friends at lunch one day, said the organizati­on’s attorney, Keon Grant.

“They were discussing their significan­t others and (Fouts) commented, ‘Is this the one you’re dating now? The junior terrorist?’” Grant said.

Darraj, a sophomore, said the rhetoric he said Fouts used can be harmful, especially amid news coverage of the Israel-Hamas war.

“I believe a formal apology is not too much to ask,” he said. “Being labeled a terrorist because I’m Palestinia­n is not only hurtful to me, but perpetuate­s dangerous stereotype­s at a time when children across this country, both Jewish and Palestinia­n, are experienci­ng unpreceden­ted violence based on their religious and ethnic origins.”

Fouts did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

Walker County Schools Superinten­dent Damon Raines issued a statement to The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on that says “the matter was promptly and thoroughly investigat­ed” in compliance with school board policy.

“An apology letter was provided and personnel action was taken. If this matter has risen to a complaint with OCR, the system has no additional comment,” Raines said.

CAIR-Georgia provided the AJC a copy of what it says is Fouts’ full apology, which reads: “I had much rather this conversati­on be face to face. I made a statement in my classroom that was taken completely out of context. If that has offended anyone, I am sorry.”

CAIR-Georgia Communicat­ions Manager Nazia Khanzada said the statement does not address Darraj nor accept fault for Fouts’ remarks, so the organizati­on still demands a formal apology.

CAIR-Georgia has documented a surge in harassment of Palestinia­n Americans since the conflict in Gaza began Oct. 7. Grant said that in 2022, civil rights complaints comprised just over half of the complaints the group received. Since October, he said, they’ve made up 87.6% of the organizati­on’s complaints.

Hall said she complained to the Walker County school board that Fouts violated the state’s “divisive concepts” law. The 2022 law bans nine concepts from being taught in schools, including teaching one race is superior or making students feel uncomforta­ble because of their race.

 ?? COURTESY ?? LaFayette High student James Darraj (middle, with his mom on his right, along with his lawyer and two members of CAIR) said a teacher at his school referred to him as a “terrorist.” The Walker County school superinten­dent said an apology letter was provided, but the Georgia chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) has taken issue with the apology.
COURTESY LaFayette High student James Darraj (middle, with his mom on his right, along with his lawyer and two members of CAIR) said a teacher at his school referred to him as a “terrorist.” The Walker County school superinten­dent said an apology letter was provided, but the Georgia chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) has taken issue with the apology.

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