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July 31, 2002

Suit Claims Student's Right to Faith

by Thanassis Cambanis
The Boston Globe

To 7-year-old Laura M. Greska, it made perfect sense to bring a book about Jesus Christ to her second-grade holiday show-and-tell. But her teacher barred her from reading aloud from "The First Christmas," saying its religious content made it inappropriate.

Now, Greska's parents have sued the Leominster school system in a federal lawsuit that cites the religious rights of students. The lawsuit, filed yesterday in US District Court in Worcester, claims that school officials violated Greska's constitutional right to freedom of speech and religion. "This is a troubling example of a school district that is clearly exhibiting hostility toward religion," said Vincent McCarthy, the Greskas' lawyer and senior counsel for the American Center for Law and Justice, a Virginia Beach-based law and education group founded in 1991 by Christian broadcaster Pat Robertson.

School officials are often unsure when religious material can enter the classroom, civil libertarians and religious rights groups agree, underscoring the lack of clear guidelines and knowledge of law that hampers some educators.

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