What to do about event sponsored by anti-Christian group
The following email was forwarded to us by one of our readers:
The Day of Silence, which is sponsored by the Gay, Lesbian and
Straight Education Network (GLSEN), fast approaches. GLSEN is listed on
AFA’s anti-Christian Bigotry map.
This year, GLSEN is urging teen students to practice openly homosexual activism in the public classroom on Friday, April 17.
On this day, thousands of public high schools and increasing numbers
of middle schools will allow students to remain silent throughout an
entire day-even during instructional time-to promote GLSEN’s
socio-political goals.
Parents must actively oppose this hijacking of the classroom for
political purposes. Pleasejoin the national effort to restore to public
education a proper understanding of the role of government-subsidized
schools.
You can help de-politicize the learning environment by calling your
child out of school if your child’s school allows students to remain
silent during instructional time on the Day of Silence.
If students will be permitted to remain silent, parents can express
their opposition most effectively by calling their children out of
school on the Day of Silence and sending letters of explanation to their
administrators, their children’s teachers, and all school board
members. One reason this is effective is that most school districts lose
money for each student absence.
School administrators err when they allow the classroom to be
disrupted and politicized by granting students permission to remain
silent throughout an entire day.
Visit www.doswalkout.net for complete information on opposing the Day of Silence.
TAKE ACTION
1. Call your local schools and ask whether they permit students or
teachers to remain silent in the classroom on “Day of Silence.”
IMPORTANT: Do not ask any administrator, school board member, or teacher
if the school sponsors, endorses, or supports DOS. Schools do not
technically sponsor the Day of Silence. Technically, it is students,
often students in the gay-straight alliance, who sponsor it. Many
administrators will tell you that they do not sponsor the DOS when, in
fact, they do permit students and sometimes even teachers to remain
silent during instructional time. Also ask administrators whether they
permit teachers to create lesson plans to accommodate student silence.
2. Find out what date the event is planned for your school. (The
national date in 2015 is Friday, April 17, but some schools observe DOS
on a different date).
3. Inform the school of your intention to keep your children home on that date and explain why.
From http://cal-catholic.com/