An interfaith group of parents says forcing elementary school children to participate in instruction that contradicts their religious beliefs on sex and gender violates their First Amendment rights.
The group in Marylandâs largest school district is hoping the Supreme Court agrees.
The Montgomery County Board of Education sparked a firestorm in March 2023 when it notified parents that they will no longer be able to opt their elementary-level students out of instruction involving books on gender and sexuality.
A list of LGBT-themed storybooks was added to the districtâs curriculum for pre-kindergarten through fifth grade in November 2022. The books included titles such as âPride Puppy,â which describes what a child might see at a Pride parade; âWhat Are Your Words,â which centers on a child whose pronouns change âlike the weatherâ; and âLove, Violet,â a story about a same-sex playground romance.
At the time, the county assured parents they would retain the right to exclude their children from any lessons concerning such materials. The policy change that came months later retracted that right and prompted local parents of diverse faiths to sue.
âThe First Amendment has long been recognized to protect the right of parents to direct the religious education and upbringing of their children, and the government is not allowed to substantially interfere with that,â Mike OâBrien, counsel at the Becket Fund for Religious Liberty, told The Epoch Times.
OâBrien will make that argument on the parentsâ behalf on April 22, when their case goes before the Supreme Court in the case of Mahmoud v. Taylor. They are seeking the restoration of their right to direct and protect their childrenâs religious beliefs, OâBrien said.
Parents Push Back
It didnât take long after the Montgomery school board announced its new no-opt-out policy for the protests to start.
Angry crowds bearing signs with messages such as âParentsâ Rights Matterâ and âEducation Over Indoctrinationâ became a regular occurrence outside the boardâs public meetings, where parents voiced their frustration.
âWhile inclusivity is important, itâs equally crucial to respect and accommodate the cultural and religious values of diverse families,â Christian mother Salem Peter told the board at its June 27, 2023, meeting.

A literacy coach reads from the LGBT-themed book âFrom the Stars in the Sky to the Fish in the Sea,â to students at Nystrom Elementary School in Richmond, Calif., on May 17, 2022. Justin Sullivan/Getty Images
âIntroducing sexual behavior and preference at an early age raises legitimate concern for us parents. Parents should have the freedom to decide when and how they address those topics based on our cultural, religious, and personal beliefs.â
The school board has defended its policy change as a step toward inclusivity, citing the potential stigma that certain students could feel if their classmates were excused from LGBT-themed activities.
Sayed Wasti, a local Muslim mother who removed her child from school due to faith-based bullying, said the boardâs concern seemed one-sided.
âIâm afraid to say that we are failing as a society where we are concerned about serving one communityâs emotional and physical well-being while ignoring the same needs for the other communities,â Wasti said at the same school board meeting.
âEvery single child deserves to feel safe, respected, valued, and seen. ⌠You accept peopleâs beliefs about their gender identity. But then, why do you marginalize others for their religious beliefs?â
Wasti is not the only Montgomery County parent who has pulled her child out of public school.
Jeff and Svitlana Roman, who are Roman Catholic and Ukrainian Orthodox, respectively, removed their son from school when the lower courts denied their request to put the districtâs policy change on hold. Muslim parents Tamer Mahmoud and Enas Barakat, additional plaintiffs in the lawsuit, felt compelled to do the same.
But not every family is in a position to homeschool their children or send them to a private school, OâBrien noted. âThat is not an option, just financially and resource-wise, for a majority of parents.â
Those who have kept their children in public schools are still waiting for a court to step in, he said.
Located just north of Washington, Montgomery is Marylandâs most populous county at about 1 million residents.

Svitlana and Jeff Roman pose for a portrait. The couple removed their son from school when the lower courts denied their request to put the districtâs policy change on hold. Courtesy of the Becket Fund for Religious Liberty
Lower Court Ruling
State law requires school districts to allow parents to opt out of education concerning âfamily life and gender identityââanother reason parents say the districtâs policy is unlawful.
âWhat the parents are asking for here is not new,â OâBrien said. âWhatâs new is Montgomery Countyâs real extreme-outlier approach to cutting parents out to impose one-sided ideological instruction on issues that strike at the heart of parentsâ ability to transmit the faith.â
The school board has arguedâand the lower courts affirmedâthat as the districtâs curriculum does not coerce students to change their beliefs, it does not burden their religious practice.
âThereâs no evidence at present that the Boardâs decision not to permit opt-outs compels the Parents or their children to change their religious beliefs or conduct, either at school or elsewhere,â a panel of the 4th Circuit Court of Appeals held in a 2â1 decision denying the parentsâ request for a temporary restoration of the former opt-out policy.
The majority pointed to the âthreadbareâ record of how the books were being used in schools in drawing that conclusion.
OâBrien, however, attributed the scant record to the boardâs vague and varying representations of how the books are implemented.
Yet OâBrien noted that the board has also âadmitted multiple times in court and in its own documents that teachers are required to use this instructionâitâs not optional.â

Mike OâBrien, counsel at the Becket Fund for Religious Liberty. OâBrien will represent the parents when their case goes before the Supreme Court on April 22. Courtesy of the Becket Fund for Religious Liberty
As evidence, he pointed to internal guidance the school district provided teachers on how they should respond to objections raised by students and parents over the LGBT materials.
In one example, teachers were encouraged to âdisrupt the either/or thinkingâ of students who voiced opposition to same-sex relationships by stating that, âactually, people of any gender can like whoever they like.â
Meanwhile, if a parent were to ask why their child should learn about such topics at school, teachers could respond that âstudents are already learning about gender and sexuality identity in myriad ways,â and that âcreating a more tolerant, inclusive, and accepting school environment teaches all children to recognize and resist stereotypes.â
The memo cited ânumerous concernsâ raised by teachers, principals, and community members regarding the booksâ age-appropriateness and purpose in the curriculum. Teachers also found the guidanceâs proposed responses to be âshamingâ and âdismissiveâ of studentsâ religious views.
The lone dissenting circuit judge, A. Marvin Quattlebaum Jr., likewise found the boardâs instructions and opt-out prohibition to be constitutionally problematic. The board, he held, was effectively requiring parents to choose between âcompromising their religious beliefs or foregoing a public education for their children.â
Quattlebaum also took issue with the boardâs assertions that such compromises were part and parcel of sending oneâs child to public school.
âThe boardâs arguments, which the district court adopted, really view the parentsâ religious objections to the texts as less important than the boardâs goals to improve inclusivity for the LGBTQ+ community,â the judge wrote. âBut this is precisely the sort of value judgment about parentsâ religious claims that courts must not make.â

Eric Baxter, senior counsel at the Becket Fund for Religious Liberty. Courtesy of the Becket Fund for Religious Liberty
High Court to Decide
With the Supreme Court soon to weigh in, outside parties have been lining up to join the debate.
The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) has defended the Montgomery school boardâs policy as âreligion-neutralâ in that it applies to those of all faiths, regardless of the reason for their objection.
âReligious liberty is fundamentally important, but it doesnât force public schools to exempt students from secular lessons that donât align with their familiesâ religious views,â said Daniel Mach, director of the ACLUâs Program on Freedom of Religion and Belief.
Mach said that allowing students to opt out of such lessons would âwreak havoc on public schools, tying their hands on basic curricular decisions, stoking divisiveness and disruption, and undermining a core purpose of public educationâto prepare students to live in our pluralistic society.â
On the other side, John Bursch, senior counsel and vice president of appellate advocacy for Alliance Defending Freedom, said parents have âthe fundamental right to make decisionsâ about their childrenâs education and upbringing, and âgovernment officials may not second-guessâ those decisions.
âToday, many school officials act as if their job is to replace parents and their beliefsânot support them,â Bursch said. âOur Constitution forbids schools from indoctrinating children with uniform views on sexuality and gender, views that are hotly debated, in conflict with their familiesâ religious beliefs, and that turn children into lifelong medical experiments and patients.â
As the court hears arguments from both sides, the debate will echo outside the courtâs walls as attendees of opposing rallies make their voices heard.
For the sake of his clients, OâBrien said he hopes the decision is swift, âso they donât have to worry day-in and day-out about their religious direction of their children being substantially interfered with.â
The Supreme Court will issue its ruling by the end of June, when its term finishes.

The Supreme Court in Washington on April 3, 2025. Madalina Vasiliu/The Epoch Times
Original News Source Link – Epoch Times
Running For Office? Conservative Campaign Consulting – Election Day Strategies!