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Religious Freedom Goes to School in South Carolina

Freedom Goes to School is a new campaign that aims to strengthen religious freedom in South Carolina’s public schools.
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November 26, 2014
A graphic showing a blue map with the state of South Carolina, and an illustration of four students inside a building, with religious symbols nearby

Religious freedom is a fundamental right, guaranteed by the Constitution, and Religious Freedom Goes to School is a new campaign that aims to strengthen religious freedom in South Carolina’s public schools.

Through the Religious Freedom Goes to School campaign, the ÀÏ°ÄÃÅ¿ª½±½á¹û and aim to spark a renewed focus on this essential right in public schools and local communities across the state.

In recent years, the ÀÏ°ÄÃÅ¿ª½±½á¹û and ÀÏ°ÄÃÅ¿ª½±½á¹û of South Carolina have received a growing number of reports from students, parents, teachers, and others detailing increasingly egregious constitutional violations of this nature in South Carolina’s public schools. In the last two years alone, we have received complaints detailing, among other violations of the Constitution:

  • in-class daily prayer led by teachers;
  • the distribution of Bibles to students;
  • prayer and scriptural readings at graduation ceremonies, athletic events, awards ceremonies, and other school activities;
  • school-day assemblies featuring prayer, preaching, and other religious content;
  • coach-organized and coach-led prayer at football practices;
  • school officials leading and participating in student religious clubs; and
  • school involvement in the planning, and promotion of, religious baccalaureate services.

We are challenging all of South Carolina’s public schools to do more to protect religious freedom because all students, regardless of faith or belief system, should feel safe and welcome in our public schools. Students have the right to decide for themselves what faith, if any, they will follow, without direct or indirect pressure from school officials. Religious Freedom Goes to School encourages protection of these fundamental rights. With this in mind, the campaign seeks to ensure that schools do not impose or promote religion.

Religious freedom also includes the right to hold and exercise religious beliefs. For more than 90 years, the ÀÏ°ÄÃÅ¿ª½±½á¹û has defended the right to freedom of religion and conscience. Religious freedom in the school setting means that students of all faiths – or no faith – can hold and exercise their beliefs without suffering discrimination by school officials. It also means that schools must accommodate, as much as possible, students’ religious exercise. Students may, among other things:

  • pray, read religious material, or engage in other religious activities during student activity times (like recess or lunch), provided that they do not cause a disruption or interfere with the education of other students;
  • wear religious clothing, such as rosaries or headscarves; and
  • form religious or atheist student clubs.

Religious liberty requires that we protect both the right of free exercise for individuals of every faith and the right to remain free from governmental coercion and promotion of religion.

A group of people wearing bright green tshirts stand in a line, with one person in a black tshirt and cap stands close to the camera.
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