Religious Minorities, Atheists Weigh in Against Pledge's 'Under God'

BY: Adelle M. Banks
Religion News Service

WASHINGTON -- As the White House, conservative Christians and school board officials anticipate the arguments and outcome of the debate over "under God" in the Pledge of Allegiance, atheists and a range of religious minorities also are holding their collective breath.

In the last month, pantheists, Buddhists and humanists have added their views to the files at the U.S. Supreme Court as the high court prepares for a March 24 hearing on the most closely watched case dealing with the intersection of church and state this term.

Michael Newdow, an atheist who sued an Elk Grove, Calif., public school district where his daughter was required to join her teacher in saying the controversial two-word phrase, said he's not surprised that more than 20 friend-of-the-court briefs have been filed in support of his arguments. He feels the words added 50 years ago to the 112-year-old pledge make it unconstitutional.

"I figured they'd have the same feelings because it turns people into outsiders," Newdow told Religion News Service.

The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled 2-1 in his favor in June 2002 but stayed its decision, so schoolchildren in the affected Western states continue to recite the pledge with the words he opposes.

Newdow, who has joint custody of his daughter with the 9-year-old's mother, argues that the school district is placing itself in the midst of family and religious decisions where it does not belong.

"The mother says there is a God," he said. "The father says there isn't a god. They're taking sides and they're interfering with my relationship with my daughter."

Like some of those represented by the burgeoning number of amicus briefs, Newdow continues to declare his patriotism through recitation of the pledge, but without the two words in question.

"I say it out of cadence from that point on and I'm turned into an outsider," he said.

Paul Harrison, president of the World Pantheist Movement, said children of pantheists must make similar choices.

"They might opt out and take their chance of consequences," he said. "They might recite it and just keep their mouths shut during those words or they might just pretend to be like everybody else. ... They're not very nice options, which is why we'd like to see those words removed."

His organization, which was incorporated in 1998, is speaking up for the first time in a legal brief to the Supreme Court. Its members revere the universe and consider nature to be sacred, gathering for such occasions as a viewing of monarch butterflies in a eucalyptus grove in Santa Barbara, Calif.

People familiar with Buddhist organizations say it is also unusual for them to take a legal stand of this sort.

"You should be allowed (to be) both a Buddhist and a patriotic American and what the pledge does in its current form is it forces these children to choose," said Ken Pierce, a lawyer for a Wall Street firm that usually represents banks and filed an amicus brief for Buddhist organizations as part of its pro-bono practice.

Continued on page 2: »

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