The Place for Seekers Who Don't Go to Church | news, opinions & reviews

PRESS RELEASE: Texas School District Has No Right To Force Native American Boy To Cut Hair, Says Americans United


Watchdog Group Says Private Religious Activity In School Is Protected

(June 26, 2009 – Americans United for Separation of Church and State) – Officials at a Texas public school have no right to force a Native American elementary school student to cut his hair, which he wears long for religious reasons, says Americans United for Separation of Church and State.

Americans United today filed a friend-of-the-court brief supporting student Adriel Arocha and his family. The family is challenging a grooming policy at the Needville Independent School District that bans long hair for male students.

"Public schools must never sponsor prayer or other religious activities," said the Rev. Barry W. Lynn, executive director of Americans United. "At the same time, they have an obligation to allow voluntary student religious expression that doesn't interfere with the rights of others.

"Adriel's decision to wear his hair long for religious reasons is a private expression of faith, and the school should respect that," Lynn continued.

Needville's policy does not allow boys to wear their hair past the collar or over the eyes. The Houston Chronicle reported last year that many rural school districts in Texas have similar rules.

Needville school officials met with Adriel's family but refused to grant them a religious exemption to the policy. School officials did say Adriel could stuff his hair into his shirt, but the family said that was not enough.

A federal district court ruled in the family's favor in January, but the school district has appealed to the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.

Americans United, which is joined on the brief by the Anti-Defamation League, is asking the 5th Circuit to uphold the lower court's decision. The family is being represented by the Texas branch of the American Civil Liberties Union.

"Public school students have the right to engage in religious activities as long as they are not disruptive and don't infringe on anyone else's rights," said Richard B. Katskee, assistant legal director of Americans United. "Adriel's decision to wear long hair easily meets both of those tests."

The case is A.A. v. Needville Independent School District.

The brief was drafted by attorneys David Gossett and Maria Glover of the Mayer Brown law firm with input by Katskee and AU Legal Director Ayesha N. Khan.

Americans United is a religious liberty watchdog group based in Washington, D.C. Founded in 1947, the organization educates Americans about the importance of church-state separation in safeguarding religious freedom.


Sphere: Related Content

Related posts:

  1. PRESS RELEASE: Americans United Commends Appellate Court Decision Against Bible Distribution In Mo. Public School
  2. PRESS RELEASE: Federal Appeals Court Made Correct Call On Religion At School Graduation, Says Americans United
  3. PRESS RELEASE: Americans United And ACLU Demand Connecticut School District Stop Holding Graduation At Christian Church
  4. PRESS RELEASE: Americans United Files Suit To Block Public School Graduation Ceremonies In Wisconsin Church
  5. PRESS RELEASE: Americans United Opposes Proposed Congressional Land Grant To Religious School In Michigan
  6. PRESS RELEASE: Supreme Court Should Reject Religious Discrimination At Public Universities, Says Americans United
  7. PRESS RELEASE: Americans United Urges Appeals Court To Give Prison-Chaplaincy Applicant His Day In Court
  8. PRESS RELEASE: Election Results Suggest Religious Right Remains Force To Contend With, Says Americans United
  9. PRESS RELEASE: Ohio Judge Has No Right To Push Religion In Courtroom, Says Americans United
  10. PRESS RELEASE: Americans United Warns Louisiana Education Board Not To Adopt Review Policy That Favors Creationism

Related posts brought to you by Yet Another Related Posts Plugin.

One Response to “PRESS RELEASE: Texas School District Has No Right To Force Native American Boy To Cut Hair, Says Americans United”

  1. Kate says:

    Seriously, I have heard of schools prohibiting hair styles such as mohawks or bright colors for obvious reasons but the length of a students hair should not matter. If the girls are allowed to wear their hair long, then this boy should be allowed to as well.

Leave a Reply

IMPORTANT NOTE: We welcome and encourage comments. However, we are receiving many 'junk comments' from people looking for back links. As of noon, November 16, 2009, comment submission authors must use a name. For example, names such as 'Payday Loans' or 'Home Accessories' will be deleted. You may continue to link to your website, but we want names (pen names are all right). Additionally, only substantive comments that have to do with the content of the article will be accepted. Comments such as 'Nice post, thanks,' will be deleted. Comments that link to pornographic or hate sites will also be deleted.

By submitting a comment here you grant this site a perpetual license to reproduce your words and name/web site in attribution. While we offer immediate approval of comments that are not screened as spam, we reserve the right to delete your comment pursuant to the site's terms, conditions and policies. GOD DISCUSSION RESERVES THE RIGHT TO DELETE OR EDIT COMMENTS FOR ANY REASON, WITHOUT NOTICE, including without limitation grammar errors, "trolling" and spamming.

Security Code:

Powered by Wordpress | (c) 2009 Organic Promotions, all worldwide rights reserved

Canonical URL by SEO No Duplicate WordPress Plugin