Mahmoud: Parents’ Religious Freedom In Education

Mahmoud: Parents’ Religious Freedom In Education

View of front of the US Supreme Court building looking up from the right side facing the building
The Supreme Court just issued a decision on parent’s religious freedom in the public schools [Image by Mark Thomas from Pixabay]
Mark Friday, June 27th as a red letter day at the US Supreme Court. Not only was it the last day of the term for the highest court in the land, but the justices released a handful of highly anticipated decisions. Among them was Mahmoud v. Taylor, arising from the reading of LGBTQ+ books in public elementary school classrooms. Parents turned to the courts when denied the opportunity to opt-out their children from this instruction based on religious objections. The Supreme Court considered parents’ religious freedom in education in this case, coming down in their favor.

Background of Religious Freedom In Education Case

The legal controversy started in Maryland’s Montgomery County Public Schools. This particular county is that state’s most populous county with over a million residents. Results of a recent survey indicate it is also the most religiously diverse county in the nation. In addition to a number of Christian denominations, Montgomery County ranks in the top five in the country as to per-capita population of Buddhists, Hindus, Jews, and Muslims.

For the 2022-2023 school year, the Board of Education for this religiously diverse county added to the elementary school curriculum “LGBTQ+- inclusive” storybooks.  Among the selections were Prince & Knight by Daniel Haack for third graders [a story about a prince preferring to marry a knight rather than a princess] and Born Ready: The True Story of a Boy Named Penelope by Jodie Patterson for fifth graders. Educational instructions accompanying the books encouraged teachers to reinforce viewpoints presented in them and to reprimand students who disagreed. A group of parents from various faiths requested  the school district to allow them to opt out their children when books containing LGBTQ+ characters and themes were used in English language arts classes. These requests were denied.

Two smiling young boys sitting side-by-side in a classroom setting with an open book in front of them
Mahmoud involved LGBTQ+ themed books used in elementary education versus religious freedom [Image by Kris from Pixabay]

Court History of Mahmoud

Dismayed by the school district’s refusal to allow opt-out of students on religious grounds, parents turned to the courts for relief. This group included parents identifying as Muslim, Roman Catholic, and Ukrainian Orthodox. Lead plaintiffs Tamer Mahmoud and Enas Baraka, are Muslim with a son in elementary school. The aggrieved parents argued the Board’s adoption of the new curriculum along with their denial of the ability to opt out impermissibly burdened their free exercise of religion.

Because the issue involved a constitutional provision, the Free Exercise Clause of the First Amendment, the lawsuit proceeded in the federal district court in Maryland. In August 2023, the presiding judge denied the plaintiff parents’ request for a preliminary injunction. Such an injunction would have restored the policy of allowing parents the right to opt out their children from the controversial lessons while the lawsuit was pending. The parents then appealed the injunction’s denial to the US Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit which upheld the decision in May 2024.

Picture of sign in front of public building saying "Montgomery County"
Parents sued Montgomery County’s School Board claiming a denial of their religious freedom by the public schools [Image from Wikimedia Commons]

Mahmoud Opinion On Religious Freedom In Education

The lengthy (135-page) Mahmoud decision reversed the lower court’s decision on a 6-3 vote. It found the plaintiffs entitled to the issuance of a preliminary injunction. Key to this outcome was the majority’s conclusion that the government burdened the religious exercise of the parents. Specifically, the government did so by requiring their children receive instruction posing “a very real threat of undermining the religious beliefs and practices that the parents wish to instill.”

Justice Samuel Alito wrote the majority opinion. Therein, he noted that the lead plaintiffs Mahmoud and Barakat believed  it immoral for their “impressionable” elementary-aged son to be exposed to teaching that undermined their Islamic faith and beliefs. He also cited prior Supreme Court decisions about the free exercise of religion. In particular, Alito quoted  Tinker v. Des Moines Independent Community School Dist., 393 U. S. 503, 506–507 (1969) for the proposition that free exercise of religion “is not shed…at the schoolhouse gate.” Further, the justice stressed the Supreme Court’s long-recognition of parents’ right to direct the religious upbringing of their children.

Picture from neck up of Justice Samuel Alito smiling
Justice Samuel Alito wrote the Mahmoud majority opinion about parents’ religious freedom in public education [Image from Wikimedia Commons]

Aftermath Of Mahmoud Decision

For now, the Montgomery County Public Schools must give notice to parents of the timing of the use of these controversial books in classroom lessons. Further, parents can opt-out their students during this teaching. But the case is far from over. Mahmoud merely required a preliminary injunction be entered while the case proceeds on the merits in the lower courts. Nevertheless, given the strong indication in the Supreme Court decision that the plaintiffs would likely prevail, the legal future looks bright for these parents. The US came into being from a desire by many for the right to free exercise of religion, a value enshrined in the Constitution’s First Amendment. Upholding the position of the Mahmoud plaintiffs when it comes to religious freedom in education honors and respects that principle.

 

BRIEF VIDEO EXPLANATION OF THE MAHMOUD CASE

 

 

 

 

About Alice H. Murray
After 35 years as a Florida adoption attorney, Alice H. Murray now pursues a different path in the publishing industry. With a passion for writing, she is constantly creating with words. Her work includes contributions to several Short And Sweet books, The Upper Room, Chicken Soup For The Soul, Abba’s Lessons (from CrossRiver Media), and the Northwest Florida Literary Review. Alice is a regular contributor to GO!, a quarterly Christian magazine in the Florida Panhandle, and she has three devotions a month published online by Dynamic Women in Missions. Her devotions have also appeared in compilation devotionals such as Ordinary People Extraordinary God (July 2023) and Guideposts’ Pray A Word A Day, Vol. 2 (June 2023), pray a word for hope (September 2023), Too Amazing For Coincidence: Heavenly Interventions (August 2024), pray a word for strength (September 2024), and God’s Constant Presence: Held In His Hand, January 2025. Alice’s first book, The Secret of Chimneys, an annotated Agatha Christie mystery, was released in April 2023. She has an adoption devotional, God Adopted Us First – Faith Lessons from an Adoption Attorney’s Adventures, scheduled for publication in October 2025. On a weekly basis, Alice posts on her blog about current events with a humorous point of view at aliceinwonderingland.wordpress.com. You can read more about the author here.
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