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Moment-of-Silence Issue Doesn’t Belong in Political Arena

Bill Bosher
Richmond Times Dispatch
(Reprinted with Permission)
March 12, 2000

The 2000 Session of the General Assembly of Virginia again is the forum for debate over the issue of “A Moment of Silence” in public schools. While the Code of Virginia permits local school boards to establish a moment of silence for “meditation, prayer, or other silent activity,” many legislators believe that school boards and superintendents are hesitant to do so because of threats of litigation. The question now is, whether the Commonwealth of Virginia should assume the authority that it granted previously to local school boards and require the observation of a moment of silence in all public schools.

The 1994 General Assembly directed the Board of Education, in consultation with the Attorney General, to develop guidelines on constitutional rights and restrictions relating to religious expression in public schools. In June 1995 the Board approved guidelines that set guidelines for religious activities. Those guidelines include the authority to establish a “Moment of Silence.”

THE DEBATE thus focuses on two issues: Should students be permitted to pray in a forum called a “Moment of Silence” and should the General Assembly require this if all students across the Commonwealth or leave this decision to local school boards?

Public schools, by their very nature, should not be used to foster a particular religious dogma or faith. In like terms, public schools also should protect the rights of young people and their teachers to acknowledge who and what they are, including their faith, as a matter of free speech. There is certainly a distinction between a prescription to pray, such as requiring that every student recite the Lord’s Prayer, and permission to pray through a “Moment of Silence.” Has the defense of one tenet of the First Amendment, the Establishment Clause, taken on such magnitude that it obscures the presence of another, free speech? Using public schools to proselytize students constitutes an abuse of this forum; however, to pretend that student and staff beliefs must be left at the school door fosters shallow relationships.

It seems that many supporters of the First Amendment would open the schools to any language or image except those that might infer a personal faith. Some legal advisers even suggest that a school official should not attend nor, certainly, speak at a community-initiated baccalaureate. If this is true, then when must a teacher, principal, or superintendent cease to teach a Sunday school class or speak in the Synagogue for fear that a student might see him or her and infer the presence of faith?

Local autonomy is one of the most important concepts in Virginia governance. Decisions are thought to be best when they are local. If local school boards have authority that they are not using, then should the pressure to change school policies come from the state? Some supporters of local autonomy even use the doctrine selectively, asserting that local boards should make local decisions until the wrong decision is made. The call then is for the state to intervene and mandate the right decision. That is a difficult standard to hold when principles are at issue, but perhaps it is the consistent political high ground.

The General Assembly debate over the issue may be far less about prayer and more about public participation. Many schools in Virginia begin each day with a Pledge of Allegiance and a Moment of Silence. These activities enable students to understand the importance of citizenship as well as to commit one minute to a quiet start or personal prayer for the day. Perhaps the debate should move away from the legislature where the practice is already authorized, and away from the Board of Education which has established guidelines for its implementation.

The debate in reality should move to homes, businesses, churches, synagogues, and community centers where the question should ring: “When will we discuss the merits of a “Moment of Silence” for our young people?”

 

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