BY ANGELA CAPUTO Daily Southtown
So long, Halloween parade. Farewell, Santa's gift shop.
The holiday traditions are facing elimination in some Oak Lawn schools
this year after complaints that the activities are offensive,
particularly to Muslim students.
Final decisions on which of the festivities will be axed will fall to
the principals at each of Ridgeland School District 122's five schools,
Supt. Tom Smyth said.
Parents expect that the announcement is going to add to the tension
that has been building since officials agreed earlier this month to
change the lunch menu to exclude items containing pork to accommodate
Muslim students. News that Jell-O was struck from the menu caused such
a stir that officials have agreed to bring it back. Gelatin is often
made with tissue or bones of pigs or other animals.
That controversy now appears to have been been dwarfed by the holiday
debate, which became so acrimonious Wednesday that police were called
to Columbus Manor School to intervene in a shouting match among parents.
"It's difficult when you change the school's culture," said Columbus
Manor Principal Sandy Robertson.
Elizabeth Zahdan, a mother of three District 122 students, says she
took her concerns to the school board this month, not because she
wanted to do away with the traditions, but rather to make them more
inclusive. "I only wanted them modified to represent everyone," she
said.
Nixing them isn't the response she was looking for. "Now the kids are
not being educated about other people," she said.
There's just not time in the six-hour school day to celebrate every
holiday, said Smyth, who sent the message to principals that they need
to "tone down" the activities that he sees as eating too much into
instructional time. "We have to think about our purpose," Smyth said.
"Are we about teaching reading, writing and math or for parties or
fund-raising during the day?"
Robertson is hoping to strike compromises that will keep traditions
alive and be culturally acceptable to all students -- nearly half of
whom are of Arab descent at Columbus Manor, she says. Fewer than a
third of students districtwide are of Arab descent, according to Smyth.
Following the example of Lieb Elementary School, Columbus Manor School
will exchange the annual Halloween parade for a fall festival next
month. The holiday gift bazaars at both schools also will remain, but
they'll likely be moved to the PTA-sponsored after-school winter
festival. And Santa's annual visit probably will be on a Saturday.
Original
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