Friday, June 3, 2005
Student sues after Bible study banned
Claims principal abruptly interrupted discussion during
recess
© 2005 WorldNetDaily.com

A 10-year-old elementary school student filed a federal civil rights lawsuit against
district officials for barring students from reading and discussing the Bible during
recess.

Luke Whitson and his parents, represented by the Alliance Defense Fund, claim
Principal Cathy Summa at Karns Elementary School in the Knox County district in
Tennessee violated constitutional rights by stopping a playground Bible study.

The lawsuit alleges: "Principal Summa abruptly interrupted certain fourth-grade
students while they were in the midst of a Bible discussion during recess, demanded
that they stop their activity at once, put their Bibles away and from that point forward,
cease from bringing their Bibles to school."


The lawsuit, filed Wednesday in U.S. District Court, asks for an injunction against the
school system to prevent employees from "banning or threatening to ban religious
_expression in the form of Bible reading and discussion during recess time."

Summa insists she did not ban Bibles from school and the Knox County district,
through a statement by Superintendent Charles Lindsey, said the principal objected to
Bible study at recess, which school officials do not consider "free time."

Lindsey emphasized students can have Bible study groups "outside the classroom
environment."

But ADF attorneys, who say school officials have given only an "evasive" response
through the media, contend recess is "non-instructional time regardless of how the
school system tries to characterize it after the fact."

"The Constitution says 'yes' to Bible reading and discussion outside of class time,"
said ADF Senior Legal Counsel Nate Kellum.

Whitson's parents, according to ADF, were unable to resolve the matter with the
principal and contacted district officials via legal counsel.

The district failed to respond, ADF claims, leaving the Whitsons with no choice but to
file suit.


ADF says officials also didn't answer the central question in their news release.

"Simply, that question is: May a couple of students get together and talk about the
Bible on the playground at recess? The district sidesteps this core issue," Kellum
said.

Summa and other school and district officials have stated in media interviews that
students may only read and discuss the Bible before or after school.

"This is not a constitutionally sound policy," Kellum contended. "Recess has long
been regarded as non-instructional time, and students may read or discuss a wide
range of literature -- including the Bible -- during such periods."

http://wnd.com/news/printer-friendly.asp?ARTICLE_ID=44565


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