READERS RESPOND
AT ISSUE: Columnist Steve Smith, who supports the state’s voucher
initiative, wrote about the role of religion in education (“Public
schools can survive a statewide voucher program,” June 24). Some readers
disagree with Smith’s position.
Other people’s gods do not scare me. It’s the believers who believe
their God should be my God that scares me.
Wendy Leece and Steve Smith conveniently overlook the reality that the
Christian Ten Commandments is not the only religious dictum with any
merit and value.
Just as Smith’s, my child is in public school. Unlike Smith, I will
not vote for or support vouchers in any way. Religious freedom gives us
all the right to participate in any religion we choose without fear of
condemnation and persecution. It does not give religions the guarantee
that my tax dollars should support others’ religion. And that is what
vouchers are. My tax dollars supporting another child’s religious
education. Vouchers are, in a sense, welfare for the rich. Those who have
money and whose children are already in private schools will benefit from
this government subsidy. Those without money who choose a private school
will find it’s not enough to cover all costs. Costs they still can’t
afford.
Our tax dollars should and must go to public education where all
children are accepted regardless of race, religion, intellect, income or
handicap. To state that we have no choice in public education is
ludicrous. We have the choice to participate, the join the PTA, to work
with our children’s teachers and principals and to be involved with the
school board influencing their decisions. These are all well-educated
individuals who work hard to help our children. They deserve our support.
Most of them belong to religions they support, yet they are wise enough
to understand that the children they work with are from many religious
beliefs.
I support our public schools. I’ll vote no on vouchers. Everyone is
allowed their personal beliefs, but I will not support their beliefs with
my money.
REBECCA DAILEY
Costa Mesa
I vividly remember December of 1963, when I was a first-grader in an
Anaheim public school. My class had just finished days of Christmas
activities, decorating the classroom, gift exchange and singing dozens of
songs.
The worst part came when my teacher announced we would sing one
Hanukkah song just for me. More than 30 5- and 6-year-olds turned to
stare at me, exposed now as the only non-Christian in my class.
Tears of embarrassment and rage streamed down my 5-year-old cheeks. I
resented the tyranny of the majority, forcing me to participate in
activities with no connection to my faith. My classmates and teacher were
oblivious to the fact that everyone was not just like them.
This is why the God of the Christian majority has no place in the
public schools; the God of Steve Smith is by no means the same God that
all Orange County school children--nor all Orange County
taxpayers--worship. If your family moved to India, Saudi Arabia or China
in pursuit of a better life, would you want the majority religion imposed
on your children?
Look around any Orange County classroom and you will see in the
children’s faces what has made our country great --those striving for a
better life and freedom from the tyranny of the majority are just the
ones who have struggle to get here. This is our strength.
Worship as you like in your home, neighborhood or church. Give thanks
to God that you live in a country where you are free to worship (or not
worship) in your own way. But don’t let the majority impose its version
of religion on our youngest citizens--not in our country.
ADELE CANETTI-WINTER
Corona del Mar
With all due respect to Steve Smith, and as a practicing Christian for
23 years, I’ve grown tired and cynical of my fellow Christians who
continue to lobby for the infusion of a particular faith into the public
schools. I’m beginning to believe that the folks who want to paper the
walls of our classrooms with the Ten Commandments (a fine document, by
the way), pad curriculum with creationism, or promulgate prayer in public
school settings do so because of their own inadequacies or the failings
of the church to instruct and encourage the faithful.
Look, God (any god) no more belongs in public schools in any
formalized way than algebra or the humanities should be the focus of
Sunday sermons. The classroom is for imparting to young generations the
fundamental truths and facts of mathematics, reading and the sciences. We
don’t teach “Creationism I” the classroom precisely because God “may have
made us.” We teach mathematics not because two and two “may” be four. It
is four.
The classroom for instructing our children in the elements of faith is
our churches, cathedrals, synagogues and homes. Why must it also be in
the public schoolhouse?
So long as our Supreme Court interprets the Establishment Clause of
the 1st Amendment as an implicit prohibition against the advancement of
any religion within publicly funded institutions we should, as Romans
13:1 instructs, submit ourselves “to the governing authorities, for there
is no authority except that which God has established.”
BYRON DE ARAKAL
Costa Mesa
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.