FFRF unveils ‘Know Your Rights’ student campaign

FFRF is kicking off a national drive to make students aware of their continuing right to be free from religious coercion in public schools, with a billboard message in Bremerton, Wash., site of the notorious lawsuit by prayerful Coach Kennedy.
Putting the spotlight where it belongs in the new school year and football season, FFRF is placing a billboard this week that reads “Wishing Bremerton High School a safe, secular & successful season,” close to Bremerton High School. The billboard message adds: “Know Your Rights” and provides a link: FFRF.us/rights.
This is the first of a multipronged FFRF reaction to the U.S. Supreme Court’s Kennedy v. Bremerton decision last June, which ignored the rights of students by siding with a public school coach who insisted on abusing his position of authority to proselytize. The justices turned a blind eye to the serious harm caused to students when the boundaries between religion and public schools are blurred. Notably, however, the court ruled only that Coach Joseph Kennedy could pray privately at the 50-yard line following the conclusion of the game, not that he could lead students in prayer as part of school events.
Anticipating confusion over the ruling, however, FFRF has charted a course of action to ensure public school students know that they still have rights to a secular school and playing field. The campaign includes an online “Know Your Rights” resource webpage and brochure for students.
FFRF’s short Know Your Rights advisory reminds public school students that they still have the right to be free from religion in their public schools, including the right to:
• Be free from coach or teacher prayer.
• To be free from bullying or harassment.
• To be free from religious coercion.
And, FFRF advises students, “You have the right to complain about violations.” The online resource encourages students to report Establishment Clause violations to FFRF at ffrf.org/legal/report.
Teachers and coaches are given enormous influence over our children as authority figures in control of their academic and extracurricular success, the Know Your Rights guidelines advise. “No student should have to feel like an outsider on their school sports team or in their classroom because teachers and coaches insist on pushing religion and prayer at school,” says FFRF Legal Director Rebecca Markert. FFRF Counsel Liz Cavell adds, “FFRF hears from thousands of students and parents each year who are harmed by First Amendment violations in our public schools.”
FFRF is also informing public school administrators that they still have an obligation to respect the rights of students to a public school education free from school-sponsored religion even in the aftermath of the Kennedy v. Bremerton judgment.
This decision does not give carte blanche to public school employees, including coaches, to engage in religious activity with their players or other subordinates, nor does it allow school districts to impose prayer on all students, parents, and community members gathered for school-sponsored events.
Public schools have a constitutional obligation not to coerce students into participating in religious rituals like prayer.
“There’s never been a more urgent time for an educational campaign of this type than now,” says FFRF Co-President Annie Laurie Gaylor. “We need more than ever to make certain that students ‘Know Their Rights.’”