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US
conservative groups are in an uproar as an influential D.C. suburb decided to
remove any mention of religious holidays – Christmas included – following
complaints from Muslim groups that their holidays were not being recognized.
RT.com reports the
multi-ethnic, multi-denominational Washington suburb faced a dilemma after its
Muslim community had petitioned to include two of its religious holidays in the
school calendar, as was the case with Christian and Jewish holidays.
Instead
of finding the space on the calendar for mentioning the Muslim holidays,
however, the Montgomery County Board of Education voted 7-1 to eliminate the
mention of all religious holidays, a move that sparked a religious firestorm.
Now, schools will be closed on the Jewish holiday of Yom Kippur and the Muslim
holiday of Eid al-Adha, which are celebrated next year on the same day, without
mention of the feast days in the calendar.
The
announcement triggered heated criticism from around the country. One Fox
commentator practically compared the decision to the ‘Grinch Who Stole Christmas.’
“As
of next year – all Christian and Jewish holidays will be removed from the
calendar,” wrote Todd Starnes, with no loss of hyperbole. “That means no more Christmas, no more
Easter and no more Yom Kippur. There’s no word on whether the board will remove
the Irish from St. Patrick’s Day or the love from St. Valentine’s Day, or the
trees from Arbor Day.”
Even
for the Montgomery School Board, the decision did not bring much comfort.
"It
was a no-win situation for us," school board chairman
Phil Kaufman told AP. At the same time,
the Muslim community was also disappointed with the vote, describing it as a “drastic step.”
“By
stripping the names Christmas, Easter, Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur, they have
alienated other communities now, and we are no closer to equality,”
said Saqib Ali, a former Maryland state delegate and co-chair of the Equality
for Eid Coalition. “It’s a
pretty drastic step, and they did it without any public notification.”
Zainab
Chaudry, also a co-chair of the coalition, said the Montgomery school officials
went “so far as to paint
themselves as the Grinch who stole Christmas” to avoid recognizing
Muslim religious days.
“They
would remove the Christian holidays and they would remove the Jewish holidays
from the calendar before they would consider adding the Muslim holiday to the
calendar,” she said.
Due
to the separation of church and state, US public schools are forbidden from
citing religious holidays as a reason for closing. However, in the event that
remaining open would appear redundant due to the high number of students
remaining at home, schools are permitted to declare days off on those holidays.
US
conservative groups are in an uproar as an influential D.C. suburb decided to
remove any mention of religious holidays – Christmas included – following
complaints from Muslim groups that their holidays were not being recognized.
The
multi-ethnic, multi-denominational Washington suburb faced a dilemma after its
Muslim community had petitioned to include two of its religious holidays in the
school calendar, as was the case with Christian and Jewish holidays. Instead
of finding the space on the calendar for mentioning the Muslim holidays,
however, the Montgomery County Board of Education voted 7-1 to eliminate the
mention of all religious holidays, a move that sparked a religious firestorm.
Now, schools will be closed on the Jewish holiday of Yom Kippur and the Muslim
holiday of Eid al-Adha, which are celebrated next year on the same day, without
mention of the feast days in the calendar.
The
announcement triggered heated criticism from around the country. One Fox
commentator practically compared the decision to the ‘Grinch Who Stole Christmas.’
“As
of next year – all Christian and Jewish holidays will be removed from the
calendar,” wrote Todd Starnes, with no loss of hyperbole. “That means no more Christmas, no more
Easter and no more Yom Kippur. There’s no word on whether the board will remove
the Irish from St. Patrick’s Day or the love from St. Valentine’s Day, or the
trees from Arbor Day.”
Even
for the Montgomery School Board, the decision did not bring much comfort.
"It
was a no-win situation for us," school board chairman
Phil Kaufman told AP. At the same time,
the Muslim community was also disappointed with the vote, describing it as a “drastic step.”
“By
stripping the names Christmas, Easter, Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur, they have
alienated other communities now, and we are no closer to equality,”
said Saqib Ali, a former Maryland state delegate and co-chair of the Equality
for Eid Coalition. “It’s a
pretty drastic step, and they did it without any public notification.”
Zainab
Chaudry, also a co-chair of the coalition, said the Montgomery school officials
went “so far as to paint
themselves as the Grinch who stole Christmas” to avoid recognizing
Muslim religious days.
“They
would remove the Christian holidays and they would remove the Jewish holidays
from the calendar before they would consider adding the Muslim holiday to the
calendar,” she said.
Due
to the separation of church and state, US public schools are forbidden from
citing religious holidays as a reason for closing. However, in the event that
remaining open would appear redundant due to the high number of students
remaining at home, schools are permitted to declare days off on those holidays.
US
conservative groups are in an uproar as an influential D.C. suburb decided to
remove any mention of religious holidays – Christmas included – following
complaints from Muslim groups that their holidays were not being recognized.
The
multi-ethnic, multi-denominational Washington suburb faced a dilemma after its
Muslim community had petitioned to include two of its religious holidays in the
school calendar, as was the case with Christian and Jewish holidays.
Instead
of finding the space on the calendar for mentioning the Muslim holidays,
however, the Montgomery County Board of Education voted 7-1 to eliminate the
mention of all religious holidays, a move that sparked a religious firestorm.
Now, schools will be closed on the Jewish holiday of Yom Kippur and the Muslim
holiday of Eid al-Adha, which are celebrated next year on the same day, without
mention of the feast days in the calendar.
The
announcement triggered heated criticism from around the country. One Fox
commentator practically compared the decision to the ‘Grinch Who Stole Christmas.’
“As
of next year – all Christian and Jewish holidays will be removed from the
calendar,” wrote Todd Starnes, with no loss of hyperbole. “That means no more Christmas, no more
Easter and no more Yom Kippur. There’s no word on whether the board will remove
the Irish from St. Patrick’s Day or the love from St. Valentine’s Day, or the
trees from Arbor Day.”
Even
for the Montgomery School Board, the decision did not bring much comfort.
"It
was a no-win situation for us," school board chairman
Phil Kaufman told AP. At the same time,
the Muslim community was also disappointed with the vote, describing it as a “drastic step.”
“By
stripping the names Christmas, Easter, Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur, they have
alienated other communities now, and we are no closer to equality,”
said Saqib Ali, a former Maryland state delegate and co-chair of the Equality
for Eid Coalition. “It’s a
pretty drastic step, and they did it without any public notification.”
Zainab
Chaudry, also a co-chair of the coalition, said the Montgomery school officials
went “so far as to paint
themselves as the Grinch who stole Christmas” to avoid recognizing
Muslim religious days.
“They
would remove the Christian holidays and they would remove the Jewish holidays
from the calendar before they would consider adding the Muslim holiday to the
calendar,” she said.
Due
to the separation of church and state, US public schools are forbidden from
citing religious holidays as a reason for closing. However, in the event that
remaining open would appear redundant due to the high number of students
remaining at home, schools are permitted to declare days off on those holidays.
Montgomery County's school
system ranks as the 17th largest in the country, with 154,000 students.
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