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Religion
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Title: Teen Girl Banned From School for Chastity Ring Heads to Court
Source: Fox/BBC
URL Source: http://www.foxnews.com/printer_friendly_story/0,3566,286395,00.html
Published: Jun 24, 2007
Author: Who knows
Post Date: 2007-06-24 02:29:32 by JCHarris
Keywords: None
Views: 631
Comments: 43

Teen Girl Banned From School for Chastity Ring Heads to Court

Saturday , June 23, 2007

A teenage girl who was banned by her school from wearing a "purity ring" is taking her case to the High Court.

Lydia Playfoot, 16, is a member of a Christian group called the Silver Ring Thing and one of a number of students at the Millais School in Horsham, West Sussex, who wears a silver ring engraved with a Biblical reference — "1 Thes 434," a reference to St. Paul's Letter to the Thessalonians — as a sign of their belief in abstinence from sex until marriage.

She claims that her secondary school is breaching her human rights by preventing her from wearing the ring, while allowing Muslim and Sikh students to wear headscarfs and religious bangles.

The school denies her claims, arguing that the purity ring is not an integral part of the Christian faith, and contravenes its uniform policy.

Playfoot will argue that her right to express her religious beliefs under Article Nine of the Human Rights Act has been breached by the ban.

"At my school Muslims are allowed to wear headscarves and other faiths can wear bangles and other types of jewellery and it feels like Christians are being discriminated against," Playfoot told BBC Radio 4’s Today program.

The Silver Ring Thing was set up in America in 1996 as a response to the escalating numbers of teen pregnancies in Yuma, Ariz. Teenagers pay a few dollars for a silver ring and a Bible, and pledge not to have sex before marriage. The movement arrived in Britain several years ago.

The U.K. branch of the Silver Ring Thing is based at the Kings Church in Horsham where Playfoot's father, Phil, is pastor. Her mother, Heather, is the company secretary of its business arm. It runs a training program called "The Silver Ring Thing 434."

Playfoot denied that wearing her silver chastity ring was a fad. "The idea is a bit American, but it's something I think is just really important. It's not just a fad sweeping across England, it is something unique, important to every single person," she told BBC Breakfast.

"It says that I’m not going to have sex until I’m married and I’m going to stay sexually pure until I’m married. In the Bible it says you should remain sexually pure and I think this is a way I want to express my faith.

"I think in the society we live in today with lots of pregnancies and STDs, something like this is quite important and should be taken hold of."

In a statement placed before the court, she said: “We are involved with SRT (Silver Ring Thing) as a movement to promote and educate young people on the issues of sexual purity."

Her father, Phil Playfoot, said that his daughter was pursuing the case, even though she was leaving the Millais school, because it embodied an important principle.

Rings had been worn by Christians for many hundreds of years and Lydia wore hers as a symbol of her commitment to her faith, he said. Many thousands of young people had made the same commitment.

He claimed that Christianity was under attack from the forces of secularism: "I think what is happening in our culture more generally is that what I would describe as secular fundamentalism is coming to the fore, which really wants to silence certain beliefs and Christian views in particular. I think an important principle is at stake here, I think Christians should be respected for their views and beliefs.

"As other faiths are allowed to express their views through the wearing of headscarfs or the Kara bracelet of a Sikh, I think Lydia should be able to wear a ring as an expression of her faith," he told the BBC.

Playfoot said that he had not put any pressure on his daughter to bring the court case. He claimed that his involvement with the Silver Ring Thing had happened after Lydia was banned from wearing the ring at school.

"Lydia is a free thinker, she is a young person in her own right," he told the BBC. "She’s not living out our beliefs or wishes, it’s something she wants to do for herself."

Stacey Wilkinson, administrator of the Silver Ring Thing U.K., said: "We are supporting Lydia but can't comment on the case itself.

"The Silver Ring Thing is mainly in youth groups. We are trying to get into schools but it's a lot harder because of the Christian background that the course includes. We don't talk about contraception at all because it's about abstinence. In some cases we are going against what the government has said, but we want to give people a second option.

"Some people take the course but don't make the pledge, but it's a good thing that they've heard the options. It gives them the option to say no."

It is not the first time students have faced school bans over Christian symbols. Earlier this year Samantha Devine, a 13-year-old Catholic schoolgirl, was told not to wear a crucifix on a chain because it breached health and safety rules at The Robert Napier School, a non-denominational mixed school in Gillingham, Kent.

The school said the only exception it would make to its uniform rule would be if the jewellery was an essential part of a particular religion, which they did not feel was the case for Miss Devine. She was free to wear a crucifix as a small lapel badge, but not on a chain, the school ruled.

In 2005, 16-year-old Sam Morris was excluded from Sinfin Community School in Derby for a day after refusing to remove her cross and chain to comply with the school’s jewellery ban.

In November Nadia Eweida lost her legal battle to wear a crucifix while working as an air stewardess, but publicity over the case forced British Airways to review its uniform policy and allow religious symbols to be worn, although only in the form of small lapel badges.

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Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 22.

#2. To: JCHarris (#0)

The school denies her claims, arguing that the purity ring is not an integral part of the Christian faith, and contravenes its uniform policy.

Playfoot will argue that her right to express her religious beliefs under Article Nine of the Human Rights Act has been breached by the ban.

When will people learn that you cannot mix schools and state?

Privatize all schools and then they can make whatever policies they want. If students don't like them, they choose a different school.

That would end this legal nonsense.

Pinguinite  posted on  2007-06-24   2:56:05 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#4. To: Pinguinite (#2) (Edited)

When will people learn that you cannot mix schools and state?

Privatize all schools and then they can make whatever policies they want. If students don't like them, they choose a different school.

That would end this legal nonsense.

Not everyone can afford private schools, and any society has a legitimate interest in basic literacy. Literacy is a bare miniumum requirement for conducting business affairs in the real world. Without basic literacy, a poor child is pre-destined to be a poor adult.

The problem here is that people like you regularly conflate and smear local governance as big government. Local governance is government by the ordinary people, people that have no affiliation with a state or a central government. Not all governments are the same, despite your libertopian rhetoric.

The US constitution formally reognizes that the people, or local governments, possess all undelegated law-making power. This liberal concept is codified in the 10th amendment.

One of the peoples reserved law-making powers is the power to create, or not create, public schools. Public schools are the legal domain of local governments, not state or central governments.

Googolplex  posted on  2007-06-24   10:33:14 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#5. To: Googolplex (#4)

Not everyone can afford private schools, and any society has a legitimate interest in basic literacy.

Today, private schools are generally always expensive only because public schooling dominates, and only the weathy can afford to both send their kids to private schools AND fund public schools through local taxes which everyone is obligated to do.

Lower and middle class cannot afford such double billing.

Obviously the funds for schooling does not grow on trees. All that funding comes from the working people, so if the working people can fund private schools through taxation, they can fund it directly also. Unless one feels extortion is the only way schooling can work.

When all are taxed to support public schooling, private schooling cannot compete and goes under, save those high end schools which the wealthy can support.

The problem here is that people like you regularly conflate and smear local governance as big government. Local governance is government by the ordinary people, people that have no affiliation with a state or a central government. Not all governments are the same, despite your libertopian rhetoric.

I'm for shutting down the fed dept of education, and I'm for eliminating any and all programs at every level of government that are not required to exist.

One of the peoples reserved law-making powers is the power to create, or not create, public schools. Public schools are the legal domain of local governments, not state or central governments.

Private schools are better as it avoids the inherent pandora's box of who has the right to teach children ethics and religious values. The right is the right of the parents, but in a state school, teaching religion is an offense of the first amendment, and then you get into issues of how to treat sexuality issues. And that's not even mentioning things like civics, where kids are to be tought about the who was right and wrong during the war between the states. You think the government should decide those kinds of things?

It is with these issues where public schools simply do not work.

BTW, here in Ecuador, private schools are much more prolific and suitable for the middle class.

Pinguinite  posted on  2007-06-24   11:32:07 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#22. To: Pinguinite (#5) (Edited)

Today, private schools are generally always expensive only because public schooling dominates, and only the weathy can afford to both send their kids to private schools AND fund public schools through local taxes which everyone is obligated to do.

Not true, parochial schools exist for poor people, and in the old days, were also supported by public funds, local and state public funds. Politically Correct, hegemonic psychos have fought to shut down local and state funding of local parochial schools, based on a compulsion of secular zionists to dominate and eliminate any competition to their PC (victim cult) morality, laws and concepts. The leaders of the American victim cult hate all morality that has been a traditional basis of local governance and organization, especially religious and ethnic based morality. Central government mandates have also served to make all schools more expensive, public and private, which hurts parochial schools serving poor people.

All taxation should be exclusively local. If taxation were exclusively local, then central government schooling mandates, money confiscation, and onerous tax policies that bribe/pay schools to implement the mandates, would be curtailed. Escalation of schooling costs would be curtailed too, as locales could tailor their schooling without worrying about costly mandates from busy-body secular zionists manipulating the central government power levers.

Ideally, state and central government funding should be procured exclusively as time-limited contracts with each local government. State and central governments exist to serve the people, aka local governments, not the other way around.

By recognizing that the people own all law-making power, local governments should be allowed to peaceably return to their traditional reliance on local laws that support the morality of the local majority, regardless of whether that morality is based on religious or ethnic principles. If local laws happen to include public (tax) support of parochial schools, then you should respect it as the people legitimately exercising their law-making power.

Googolplex  posted on  2007-06-24   13:59:34 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


Replies to Comment # 22.

#26. To: Googolplex (#22)

Not true, parochial schools exist for poor people,

Naw, don't go there. I went to a parochial school up to high school, and it took me a good 15 years to get rid of the indoctrination. Esp. the part about not needing to read the Bible, cause it is all in the catechism. AND, that part was told directly to me by Father Werner, when I brough a brand shiny new Bible to class that my mother had bought for me, and he asked why I thought I needed that and etc.

richard9151  posted on  2007-06-24 19:30:12 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


End Trace Mode for Comment # 22.

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