The Freedom From Religion Foundation has filed suit against a
second Pennsylvania school district in as many weeks over a Ten
Commandments monument on school property. The anti-religion attack
group, which had filed a lawsuit on September 14 against the New
Kensington-Arnold School District for the Ten Commandments monument
displayed at its Valley High School, mounted a similar assault against
the Connellsville Area School District for its Decalogue display at the
Connellsville Junior High School.
Both monuments were donated by the Fraternal Order of Eagles in the
late 1950s when that group was pursuing a campaign to erect such
displays in communities across America. The FFRF has systematically
targeted these displays over the past several years in an apparent
attempt to denude America's landscape of all expressions of faith in
God.
According to a an FFRF press release, its complaint against the
Connellsville school district “states that the continued presence of the
Ten Commandments on district property is an unconstitutional
advancement and endorsement of religion. The complaint also notes that
the display 'lacks any secular purpose,' citing Stone v. Graham,
a 1980 Supreme Court decision which ruled the Ten Commandments may not
be posted in public school classrooms, because the 'pre-eminent purpose'
for doing so 'is plainly religious in nature.'”
According to the
Associated Press,
a nearby church offered to have the five-foot-high monument moved from
the Connellsville Junior High grounds to its property, where it would be
prominently displayed. “However, the lawsuit filed in U.S. District
Court also seeks to prevent the monument from being displayed by the
church because it's next to some school athletic fields and might be
seen by students,” reported AP.
Attorney Marcus B. Schneider, who is representing the plaintiffs
identified as “Doe 4” and “Doe 5” in the FFRF suit (Does “1” and “2”
being connected to the New Kensington-Arnold complaint), complained that
moving the monument to the church would “bring district students in
contact with the Ten Commandments monument. Doe 4 will attend
Connellsville Area Senior High School upon completion of her studies at
the junior high. If the monument is moved to the athletic fields, it is
assured that she will continue to view the monument.”
Matt Staver of the conservative legal advocacy group
Liberty Counsel
observed that the FFRF's efforts to keep the church from displaying the
monument on its private property demonstrates that the atheist group's
agenda has little to do with addressing supposed constitutional
concerns, but instead is about obliterating “Judeo-Christianity and any
kind of symbols from our history and heritage from even the sight of
someone.” Staver added that “whether it's on private property or not is
no concern of theirs. What's a concern of theirs is whether or not
someone can even see it.”
In the complaint Schneider wrote that his clients, Doe 4 and 5, feel
that “the monument excludes them and others, both members of the
community and visitors to the district, who do not follow the particular
religion or god that the monument endorses.”
The school district had attempted to appease those complaining about
the monument by encasing it in a plywood box so no one could see it, but
the plywood was removed on several occasions by anonymous supporters of
the monument. “The indefinite covering of the highly conspicuous Ten
Commandments monument has neither remedied the impermissible coercion
that Plaintiffs previously endured,” the complaint reads, "nor has it
had the effect of squelching the message of religious endorsement that
the district continues to send.”
In the other Pennsylvania Ten Commandments case, the New
Kensington-Arnold School District has chosen to fight back against the
FFRF's intimidation. As reported by
The New American,
“both school officials and local religious and civic leaders have
stepped forward to defend their community's right to determine what it
will allow in the realm of religious expression.”
The FFRF itself noted that school board president Robert Pallone
“wrote in March on the Facebook webpage called 'Keep the Ten
Commandments at Valley High School,' that the district would not 'remove
this monument without a fight.'” In addition local clergy organized a
rally in front of Valley High School in support of the decision to keep
the monument.
In related news, a federal judge has dismissed a lawsuit filed by the
FFRF challenging a resolution passed by the Pennsylvania House of
Representatives declaring 2012 as the “Year of the Bible” in the state.
The resolution declared that the Holy Bible had exerted a “formative
influence" on the founding of America, and encouraged the state's
residents to spend the year reading through the Holy Scriptures.
However, while U.S. Middle District Judge Christopher C. Conner ruled
that the lawmakers enjoyed “absolute legislative immunity” to pass the
resolution, he nonetheless criticized the measure as “proselytizing and
exclusionary,” adding that his decision “should not be viewed as
judicial endorsement for this resolution. It most certainly is not.”
Wrote Conner in his ruling: “At a time when the Commonwealth of
Pennsylvania faces massive public policy challenges, these resources
would be far better utilized in meaningful legislative efforts for the
benefit of all of the citizens of the commonwealth, regardless of their
religious beliefs.”