LSUmiss
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Sep 8, 2014
- Messages
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I th
I agree. That’s why I feel like I do. Who cares if it’s not your religion that’s being celebrated. You will likely encounter all kinds of ppl everywhere you go so learn about what others believe. I am an atheist. DS goes to Catholic school. I went to Catholic school too so clearly it’s not like that matters as far as your beliefs later in life. He goes to the school he does because it’s a good school. And, I’m glad he learns about religion. He can then have the knowledge & freedom to decide his beliefs for himself when he is older. I don’t get the big deal of letting your child participate in something even if it’s different from your personal beliefs.I grew up with the mindset of your religion, race, gender doesn't mean a hill of beans. A good person is a good person.
Maybe because of my upbringing I see this differently.
Switch it up, say Hanukah was the celebrated holiday and Christmas was the background one. I know my parents, they wouldn't have pulled me from participating. They wouldn't have cared that the classroom was adorned with menorahs, dreidels, and colored in blue & white. They would have said go have fun and learn about another cultures tradition. I know, not all parents are like that. But I have to think a lot more are like that than not. Otherwise, these events would have been canceled eons ago. Maybe I am foolish to think this? That is quite possible.
That could be why I don't quite understand the adamance of canceling it all. Although I do realize winter holidays, Christmas/Hanukah/Kwanzaa, are blatantly religious. IMHO, in public schools it should be an all or none scenario. (and to @sam_gordon, I can understand your stance. In your circumstance, a song and possible lone dreidel decoration to appease wasn't a solution.)
And again, maybe my naivety is showing, but in our current world I don't see Halloween and Valentine's Day as religious holidays. I really don't think the vast majority see those as religious. I hear every year people complaining that Valentine's Day is a made up Hallmark holiday (along with Sweetest Day, to which I 100% agree on that one - lol.)
Therefore, through my eyes, canceling all the fun for the majority who do not see (especially those two events of Halloween and Valentine's Day) as religious feels unfair.
It falls along the same lines of when you have permission slips for field trips or the sex education talk. If you don't want your child to participate, that is perfectly acceptable. But that is on the parents. I think pulling your kid from those classroom parties because you don't believe in them is fine. And you don't have to pull them all day, just the last 1-1.5 hours because that is when the parties are.
To me, canceling them all for the outliers feels like the knee jerk reaction.