12 Washington State High School Students Suspended for Public Prayer Group

0 views
Skip to first unread message

Pastor Dale Morgan

unread,
Mar 7, 2007, 9:42:20 PM3/7/07
to Bible-Pro...@googlegroups.com
*Faith Under Fire

12 Washington State High School Students Suspended for Public Prayer Group*

By Gudrun Schultz

VANCOUVER, Washington, USA March 6, 2007 (LifeSiteNews.com) - A number
of students who formed an interdenominational prayer group at a
Washington state high school were expelled by the administration last
week over their refusal to hold a morning prayer session in a closed
room, The Columbian reported March 2.

Twelve students at Heritage High School in Vancouver, WA, were suspended
last Friday after continuing to meet for morning prayer in the commons
area of the school, despite a faculty order that they stop causing
physical "disruption" to student traffic with public prayer.

Several students had complained about the quiet prayer circle--one
student who objected was described as "pagan."

A student who participated in the prayer group said the point of holding
it publicly was to encourage others to join in.

"We're not bothering anybody. If we're not preaching and passing out
fliers, why can't we do it?" 16-year-old Megan Gaultier told The
Columbian. "Basically, there are just the pagans who are against it."
The group included Baptist, Methodist, Roman Catholic and several
Russian Orthodox students, Gaultier said.

"If we're in a secluded room, they can't just join in" Gaultier said, as
she had done herself. The small group had attracted more participants
over the 1-2 week period the students met, The Oregonian reported.

An assistant superintendent at the school said the students were given
suspensions for refusing to obey a faculty directive not to block
traffic in the public area.

"No one gets suspended because they pray. This is a story of some kids
who chose to defy a legitimate request by administrators to not disrupt
other students," Bill Bentley said. Administrators had offered a
classroom for the students' use, to ensure other students were not
offended and the group did not obstruct traffic.

The case has quickly grown to represent simmering issues of freedom of
religion on public school campuses, with pro-family Liberty Counsel,
based in Florida, offering legal advice and representation to the
Heritage students.

"It is absolutely outrageous that the school allowed one Satanist
student to exercise a heckler's veto over the other students' speech,"
said Anita L. Staver, Liberty Counsel president. "Most of the students
who were suspended are immigrants from Russia. We must show them that
America is still the land of the free. School officials must immediately
reverse the suspensions."

The students attempted to start a prayer club several weeks ago, Liberty
Counsel reported in a statement to the press, but were denied permission
by the school's vice principal Alex Otoupal.

A group of students held a morning prayer session on the sidewalk in
front of the grounds of Heritage High school yesterday morning, The
Oregonian reported March 5--school principal Ann Sosky said the students
were within their rights to do so since they weren't on school property.

Reply all
Reply to author
Forward
0 new messages