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Establishment Clause Related to School's Transcendental Meditation Program Sent to Transcendental Mediation
OK, not really, but the judge partly denied the motion for summary judgment, which would allow it to go to trial.
From Williams v. Bd. of Ed., decided Tuesday by Judge Matthew Kennelly (N.D. Ill.):
Williams attended Bogan Computer Technical High School (Bogan) in Chicago from fall 2017 until he graduated on June 18, 2019. While Williams was a student, Bogan implemented the Quiet Time program during the 2017–18 and 2018–19 school years….
According to Williams, his first experience with Transcendental Meditation as a part of the Quiet Time program occurred during the 2018–19 school year, when he was eighteen years old. He stated that he did not receive any letters about the program to give to his parents, but in October 2018 he and other students were given a document titled "Quiet Time Program Student Application for Transcendental Meditation Instruction Bogan High School." He also stated that he had been informed that Transcendental Meditation was "a really effective way to meditate and find yourself" and that he signed the form when it was first presented to him because he "was interested learning [meditation] properly."
Although the document included language stating that "learning the TM technique is an optional activity," Williams maintained it was "not optional" and "mandated" for students to sign the document. He explained that this was because students who initially chose not to learn Transcendental Meditation "eventually had to sign up," though "off the top of [his] head at the [moment]" he was unable to name any student who did not sign the document at first and later "was forced to do [Transcendental Meditation]." As for meditating during the fifteen-minute Quiet Time periods, Williams did not dispute that "if [he] didn't want to do [Transcendental Meditation], [he] didn't have to."
In contrast, Principal Aziz-Sims testified during her deposition that students could choose not to learn Transcendental Meditation. She stated that although students who were disrupting others during Quiet Time may have been reprimanded by a teacher, an administrator, or the principal herself, she was not aware of any Bogan student being disciplined for choosing not to learn Transcendental Meditation. She also testified that she approved giving students at least two letters explaining Quiet Time to their parents and allowing their parents to opt out of the program, in accordance with the school's policy regarding student involvement in other school activities.
Sunita Martin, an independent contractor with DLF [David Lynch Foundation] who was involved in implementing Quiet Time, similarly stated that students were given an "opt-out packet" and instructed to "take it home and give to their parent or guardian so that they could look it over and if their parent was not interested in them learning, then they would return that to us so we could know." Students who were interested in learning Transcendental Meditation "could fill out a one-page form with their name, the classroom that they were in so that we could keep record of who was interested and who was not." Various other employees of the University and DLF also testified that learning Transcendental Meditation was optional and that they did not witness any students being required to meditate during Quiet Time.
Williams signed the consent form and began learning Transcendental Meditation in October 2018. He and other students who learned Transcendental Meditation participated in a training course for one hour each day over the course of four days. On the first day of his training, Williams was present for a three-to-four-minute initiation ceremony. The initiation took place at a classroom at Bogan. It involved a Transcendental Meditation instructor placing assorted items in front of a painting of a man and speaking in Sanskrit. The items varied from one initiation to the next, but could include flowers, fruit, a candle, rice, water, and sandalwood powder. Williams testified that he mostly stood and observed the initiation, but at one point the instructor asked him to repeat words in a language that he did not understand. He stated that when he asked what the words he repeated meant, the instructor informed him that those words did not have any meaning. The instructor also gave Williams a "mantra" on his first day of training and instructed him to repeat it while meditating. Williams said that the instructor told him the mantra "didn't have any meaning" and was a tool to help him relax during meditation. He further testified that the "only thing [the Quiet Time staff] claim[ed]" over the course of the program was that "anything they were showing us had no deep significance to it or meaning behind it and just to do [it]." Students who did not learn Transcendental Meditation were neither present for the initiation nor given a mantra.
On occasion throughout the 2018–19 school year, Transcendental Meditation instructors came to Williams's classroom and led him and other students through a meditation. During those sessions, the instructors rang a bell to start meditation, told the students to think of their mantra during the meditation, and rang another bell to end meditation. Not every student in Williams's class meditated during the instructor-led meditations, and Williams stated that he personally practiced Transcendental Meditation approximately twenty-five percent of the time during the fifteen-minute Quiet Time periods until the spring of 2019.
Around that time, substitute teacher Dasia Skinner approached Williams and informed him that she believed Transcendental Meditation was a religious practice. Williams testified that after speaking with Skinner—who was neither trained in Transcendental Meditation nor involved in implementing Quiet Time—and doing "his own research," he concluded that the mantra he received and the initiation ceremony were related to Hinduism. Williams also agreed, however, that the meditation instructors and Quiet Time program staff did not instruct him to "believe in a particular religion or particular deity." Williams stopped practicing Transcendental Meditation after speaking with Skinner, and he graduated from Bogan when the school year ended on June 18, 2019.
The court allowed Williams' Establishment Clause claim to move forward:
The Court … [concludes that] there is a genuine dispute of material fact and a reasonable jury could—but is not guaranteed to—find that Quiet Time violated the First Amendment….
The defendants contend that Williams has failed to satisfy Kennedy v. Bremerton School District's "historical practices and understandings" test. They point out that Williams at most distinguishes Kennedy on the facts but does not discuss or analyze any historical practices relating to allegedly religious activities in public schools. Yet a historical analysis is not necessary in this case. The Court stated in Kennedy that it did not overrule prior decisions in which "[the Supreme Court] has found prayer involving public school students to be problematically coercive." And the Court stated that it "has long held that government may not, consistent with a historically sensitive understanding of the Establishment Clause, 'make a religious observance compulsory.'" A state actor therefore "may not coerce anyone to attend church" or participate in "a formal religious exercise," and "coercion along these lines was among the foremost hallmarks of religious establishments the framers sought to prohibit when they adopted the First Amendment."
The Seventh Circuit has recognized that one test for evaluating Establishment Clause challenges "is known as the 'coercion' test[,]" and "[t]he Supreme Court has applied this test in school prayer cases." Kennedy's extensive discussion of coercion indicates that this test is still good law, as the decision makes it clear that compulsory prayer or other religious activities in schools do not align with this country's historical practices and understandings. Although "[the Supreme Court] has long recognized as well that 'secondary school students are mature enough … to understand that a school does not endorse,' let alone coerce them to participate in, 'speech that it merely permits on a nondiscriminatory basis[,]' " there is also a "traditional understanding that permitting private speech is not the same thing as coercing others to participate in it." To the extent that a school program or activity that causes "some [to] take offense to certain forms of speech or prayer they are sure to encounter in a society where those activities enjoy such robust constitutional protection[ ]" does not violate the Establishment Clause, the Supreme Court expressly stated that this was because "[o]ffense … does not equate to coercion."
In applying the "coercion" test, the Seventh Circuit appears to have considered several factors, including whether (1) the school "had a captive audience on its hands," (2) there was any "religious activity in which [students] had to partake," and (3) students "felt pressured to support the religious aspects of the [activity] when they saw others … reflecting on the religiosity of the [activity.]" A state actor need not "act with a religious motive in order to fail the coercion test" when it conducts a school activity "in an indisputably religious setting" or chooses to "affirmatively to involve religion in [a] mandatory [activity]." Because there is sufficient evidence to permit a reasonable jury to find in Williams's favor on each of these considerations, the defendants are not entitled to summary judgment on this point.
A reasonable jury could find that the school had a "captive audience" for both the Quiet Time program overall and the Transcendental Meditation initiation ceremony. The defendants do not dispute that Quiet Time was part of the school schedule at Bogan, and students who did not practice Transcendental Meditation were nonetheless present in classrooms when instructor-led meditation occurred. Nothing in the record suggests that students who did not meditate during Quiet Time could leave the classroom or go elsewhere for those fifteen minutes, and Williams testified that an instructor took him to a separate classroom to witness the initiation ceremony. There is conflicting testimony regarding whether it was optional for students to learn Transcendental Meditation and thus experience the initiation. Williams stated during his deposition that it was mandatory to sign up to learn Transcendental Meditation, but Principal Aziz-Sims [and others] … testified that learning and practicing Transcendental Meditation was optional for students. Because "district courts presiding over summary judgment proceedings may not 'weigh conflicting evidence,' or make credibility determinations," the conflicting testimony of the various witnesses is sufficient to create a genuine factual dispute on whether there was a captive audience for at least the initiation ceremony.
That dispute aside, a reasonable jury could find that the program included a "religious activity in which [students] had to partake[.]"Specifically, there is evidence that a Transcendental Meditation instructor separated Williams from his classmates and brought him individually to a different classroom for the initiation. A reasonable jury could find that Williams, having arguably signed up to be trained in Transcendental Meditation, was then required to observe a religious ceremony in order to learn meditation and was misled about the ceremony's religious nature. The scenario as presented by Williams differs from the school prayer cases and the situation in Malnak v. Yogi (3d Cir. 1979), because there was no imposition or mention of any specific beliefs by the defendants. But the initiation ceremony distinguishes this situation from those cases involving the simple practice of Yoga in schools. The evidence in this record—most notably the details of the initiation ceremony—suggest that a reasonable jury could find that the Transcendental Meditation training as implemented was religious in nature or at least included a required religious ceremony.
{The defendants contend that the Court should not focus on "a one-time, three-minute expression of gratitude the instructor performed[,]" citing to the Supreme Court's statement that "[f]ocus exclusively on the religious component of any activity would inevitably lead to its invalidation under the Establishment Clause." Lynch v. Donnelly, 465 U.S. 668 (1984). Yet the statement in Lynch was in reference to a nativity scene in the context of a Christmas display, and the Supreme Court held post-Lynch that even a two-minute prayer was sufficient to violate the Establishment Clause. Lee v. Weisman (1992).}
Lastly, the Seventh Circuit considered in Concord whether students "felt pressured to support the religious aspects of the [activity] when they saw others … reflecting on the religiosity of the [activity]" in deciding whether a school activity was coercive. Freedom From Religion Found., Inc. v. Concord Cmty. Schs. (7th Cir. 2018). A reasonable jury could find that Williams felt pressured to support the purportedly religious aspects of Transcendental Meditation during the initiation ceremony, when he saw various items placed around a picture of a teacher of Transcendental Meditation while the instructor spoke in a language he did not understand. It is less clear whether Williams would have felt pressured to support the instructor-led meditation in the classrooms, as he conceded that he could not tell whether other students were meditating or "reflecting on the religiosity" of the meditation. There is a genuine factual dispute on this point….
[T]he defendants move for summary judgment on compensatory damages, arguing that Williams has not provided sufficient proof of emotional damages. There is no evidence that Williams sought medical or mental health care as a result of his alleged distress from the Quiet Time program, but "an injured person's testimony may, by itself or in conjunction with the circumstances of a given case, be sufficient to establish emotional distress without more." "The more inherently degrading or humiliating the defendant's action is, the more reasonable it is to infer that a person would suffer humiliation or distress from that action; consequently, somewhat more conclusory evidence of emotional distress will be acceptable to support an award for emotional distress." However, "[w]hen the injured plaintiff's testimony is the only proof of emotional damages, [he] must explain the circumstances of [his] injury in reasonable detail; [he] may not rely on conclusory statements."
Williams testified that he experienced mental health challenges and suicidal thoughts prior to participating in the Quiet Time program, but that Transcendental Meditation made his struggles worse. When asked to explain how his condition worsened, Williams stated that "not many know about it, but like I killed a couple animals, I was getting in trouble for starting fires in people's garages, trash every in the alley on fire[.]" He then appeared to clarify that he was referring to animals he had harmed before he learned Transcendental Meditation, but viewing this testimony in Williams's favor as the non-movant, the Court concludes that Williams has described his emotional distress injury in "reasonable detail." Furthermore, if a jury concludes that Transcendental Meditation was a religious practice and that Williams was coerced into learning it, that jury could also reasonably conclude that the experience would be "inherently degrading or humiliating" and accept Williams's more conclusory statements as proof of his emotional distress injury….
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Having a teacher tell you "you must" that is what is wrong.
Why ,if coercion to learn even exists, are so many students stupid as rocks in regard to reading, writing, and rithmetic.
Obviously, the school’s main mistake here is not including a waiver of the right to sue over the program, as part of the application form - one that would survive a student/parent’s decision to withdraw from participating in the program.
Texas is on it, though!
I must be out of date…I thought “released time” was the outer limit of the what the Supremes permitted, apparently they’ve gone further than that, and allowed noncoercive religion in classrooms.
Why not optional Bible readings, too?
It will be interesting to see how far the Christian Nationalists go, when it comes to indoctrinating students in public schools with their Christian beliefs. “Coercion” remains the line, for now, but the Court seems to have signaled that it will take a fairly narrow view of what could constitute “coercion.”
The Texas approach – for now, sure to be updated in the next legislative session/campaign season – is to permit school districts to create optional sessions and spaces where students can
pray or read the Bibleengage in non-denominational, silent religious contemplation or study. It’s intentionally crafted not to be coercive and to require parental permission.But they could go further. I went to a private Catholic high school – so it was not subject to any First Amendment prohibitions – but one thing they did was hold weekly Mass during school hours. Non-Catholics were not required to attend, but if they did not attend, they were required to remain on campus, in designated “study halls” that were functionally indistinguishable from detention. One could see the argument that this was not truly “coercive” – study halls are also typical parts of any school day, and remaining on campus studying is hardly in conflict with the broader educational purpose of school. But at the same time, being so “detention”-like can clearly come off as a form of “punishment” for not engaging in the religious practice.
So I can see a situation where a district sets aside “prayer time” in every school day. Students are not required to attend “prayer time,” but if they do not, they must go to other areas to quietly study their own coursework. This is done to ease administration and scheduling for the school. Teachers are instructed not to “coerce” students to one or the other, and are not allowed to direct “prayer time” other than to engage in their own forms of prayer, if they so wish.
Is that coercive? Given the Court’s recent holding in Kennedy – which didn’t address the question of whether his after-game “prayer time” was coercive, but took as granted that it wasn’t (despite this being a bit hard to believe, given the facts) – I’d guess the Court wouldn’t think so.
It is interesting that proponents of organized religion indicate their beliefs (and the associated benefits) can not stand on merit, which is remarkable, given the ostensible benefits of belief.
Instead, evangelists aggressively and incessantly press superstition on others (children, especially, as with inserting superstition into the Pledge of Allegiance), or tie the consumption of religious messages with other -- reality-based -- benefits (food, clothing, etc.).
A god that can't stand on its own two feet is a paltry thing indeed. And illusory.
"Ooh, I wish God existed so I could give Him a piece of my mind!"
Religious plaintiffs were some of the original snowflakes. Whether it’s standing for a flag, working on a Saturday, being prohibited from praying on the precise location of a football field where Jesus told you to, or being duped into saying something in another language you wouldn’t have said if you knew what it meant, the kinds of emotional harms these people allege are very hard for a thoroughly secular person to believe are possible.
Meanwhile, of course, comparable psychic harms to atheists in the form of so-called “ceremonial deisms,” Ten Commandments posters and monuments, prominently-displayed crosses, chaplain-led prayers at public proceedings, etc., etc., etc., are dismissed out of hand. It seems to me that, if a kid can sue because he said something in Hindi that he didn’t realize he was saying – despite voluntarily participating in the meditation session and choosing to utter the mantra in the first place – I ought to be able to sue for having to sit through a chaplain bloviate meaninglessly before a meeting to discuss liquor licensing.
Our society has long recognized a difference between merely having to see and hear other people do their thing, and being forced to join them and do it oneself. Maintaining that distinction is important to a free, diverse society. Having to put up with what other people do is qualitatively different from being forced, coerced, or tricked into actively participating.
Are you saying that I am free to not remain silent or "respectful" during a chaplain-led prayer at a public proceeding? Are you saying that I am free to raise my children in accordance with my own beliefs, without being constantly barraged by the religious iconography and ideology of Christians? Who gets to decide whether I am only passively perceiving what others are doing, and whether that meaningfully affects me?
Like I said - this kid voluntarily participated in the meditation, and is only now claiming he was "coerced" to utter a mantra whose words he didn't understand. He was only "humiliated" after he later found out what those words meant. What a snowflake!
Somebody tells you he wants to go to the bathroom. You let him in. He then takes all your money. You are a snowflake and it’s your fault because you didn’t understand his intentions? He didn’t coerce you into doing anything? You voluntarily participated?
Fraud is a well-recognized form of theft. People defrauded into taking actions they never would have taken if they knew what the fraudster intended are not snowflakes. And their conduct is not voluntary consent.
Note that TM mantras are not meaningful for the TM teacher, either and in fact, if you google the terms [maharsihi mantra meditation] without quotes, the top hit should be a short video by the founder of TM from 50 years ago explaining WHY TM mantras are meant to have no meaning.
In fact, the preliminary mantras used by beginning TMers are "bija" and if you look up "bija" in wikipedia, you'll find that while some traditions hold that they are meaningful to the gods and while others suggest that they are ways of evoking the gods, the bija mantra itself has no meaning in the dictionary sense. Certainly, that is how they are presented by the founder of TM and by the meditation teachers he trained.
The most famous bija mantra is Om. Here is the "meaning" of Om according to the Mandukya Upandishad:
*All is OM: Hari Om. The whole universe is the syllable Om. Everything that was, is, or will be, verily is Om. All that which transcends time, space, and causation is also Om.*
The mantras used in TM do not include Om, but have similarly esoteric "meaning."
When Williams claimed to be repeating words in Sanskrit, he is misremembering. He was asked to repeat one single word in Sanskrit, his mantra, and that was so his teacher would know that he had learned the pronunciation. No explanation or discussing of meaning was done at that time (I've been through the ceremony nearly ten times over the past 50 years), and in fact, the meanings of TM mantras are never discussed with meditators, or, that I have heard, with TM teachers either. They are "meaningless sounds whose effects are 'known to be good' when used during meditation."
Maharishi Mahesh Yogi convinced his students to pioneer the scientific study of meditation and enlightenment many decades ago, saying:
* _"Every experience has its level of physiology, and so unbounded awareness has its own level of physiology which can be measured. Every aspect of life is integrated and connected with every other phase. When we talk of scientific measurements, it does not take away from the spiritual experience. We are not responsible for those times when spiritual experience was thought of as metaphysical. Everything is physical. [human] Consciousness is the product of the functioning of the [human] brain. Talking of scientific measurements is no damage to that wholeness of life which is present everywhere and which begins to be lived when the physiology is taking on a particular form. This is our understanding about spirituality: it is not on the level of faith --it is on the level of blood and bone and flesh and activity. It is measurable."_
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As part of the studies on enlightenment and samadhi via TM, researchers found 17 subjects (average meditation, etc experience 24 years) who were reporting at least having a pure sense-of-self continuously for at least a year, and asked them to "describe yourself" , and these were some of the responses:
* _We ordinarily think my self as this age; this color of hair; these hobbies . . . my experience is that my Self is a lot larger than that. It's immeasurably vast. . . on a physical level. It is not just restricted to this physical environment_
* _It's the ‘‘I am-ness.’’ It's my Being. There's just a channel underneath that's just underlying everything. It's my essence there and it just doesn't stop where I stop. . . by ‘‘I,’’ I mean this 5 ft. 2 person that moves around here and there_
* _I look out and see this beautiful divine Intelligence. . . you could say in the sky, in the tree, but really being expressed through these things. . . and these are my Self_
* _I experience myself as being without edges or content. . . beyond the universe. . . all-pervading, and being absolutely thrilled, absolutely delighted with every motion that my body makes. With everything that my eyes see, my ears hear, my nose smells._
* _There's a delight in the sense that I am able to penetrate that. My consciousness, my intelligence pervades everything I see, feel and think_
* _When I say ’’I’’ that's the Self. There's a quality that is so pervasive about the Self that I'm quite sure that the ‘‘I’’ is the same ‘‘I’’ as everyone else's ‘‘I.’’ Not in terms of what follows right after. I am tall, I am short, I am fat, I am this, I am that. But the ‘‘I’’ part. The ‘‘I am’’ part is the same ‘‘I am’’ for you and me_
The above study subjects had the highest levels of TM-like EEG during demanding task of any group ever study.
"Enlightenment" via TM is defined in terms of normal resting (or attention-shifting during task, which involves the same brain circuitry) becoming sufficiently TM-like. Because our sense-of-self is our appreciation of how the brain rests, the lower noise your brain is while resting, the lower-noise your sense-of-self, until eventually, the perspective described above starts to emerge (note that the above is still considered preliminary by Yogic standards and there is still a great deal of difference between TM and resting outside of TM in the people quoted above, but they're a lot closer to convergence of normal resting and TM than the average person is).
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Note also that seeing a beautiful sunset or a walk in the woods, or sitting under a Sychamore tree "A few Miles Above Tintern Abbey" can also induce the same effect; meditation (TM specifically, as mindfulness practice has the exact opposite effect on the brain) is simply a more reliable way to induce it, however.
Maybe the proper legal distinction is this: prayers organized by “Christian Nationalists” are unconstitutional, but incense and (non-Christian) meditation are cool and trendy, and are constitutional.
Show me a study where Christian meditation was introduced to half the students in about a dozen schools in 3 different cities and the half that was doing a meaningless (to them and to the people that taught them) Christian prayer twice daily for 15 minutes shows a 65-70% lower arrest rate for violent crime than the half of the students who were not participating in teh Christian prayer.
Show me the person with Parkinson's Disease who learns a meaningless Christian prayer and within a few seconds of starting to think that prayer for the very first time with their eyes closed, his Parkinsonl's Disease tremors cease for the duration of that prayer and continue to cease every time he thinks that prayer. This is exactly what happened to actor Michael J Fox during his first and every subsequent TM session over he past decade (and why his foundation is doing research to figure out why it happens to him and to at least some other PD patients).
Show me the Moslem country where a Christian prayer was introduced into a prison system where 5-times daily prayers are customary, and during that first day when the entire prison (31 out of 35, country wide) learned that Christian prayer, the violence in the prison dropped to zero and remained almost at zero for an entire year. That was the experience in Senegal when TM instruction was given to everyone in 31 of 34 prisons.
That ceremony at the heart of the lawsuit is known to induce a very TM-like EEG pattern in people who hear it, and it is only after that cermony is done that the TM student learns their mantra and how to use it, and so, whenver they remember their mantra (that is, whenever they meditate), they tend to go back into the same state they were in when they first learned.
Show me the Christian prayer that induces that EEG pattern when performed for non-believers. It wouldn't surprise me if sometimes that happened, but Christian prayers are not taught in the careful way that the TM ceremony is taught to TM teachers, and Christian priests are not regularly indulging in a practice that enhances that EEG pattern, either.
Neither are most Yogis, which is why the founder of TM was sent out of a remote monastery in the Himalayas 65 years ago to teach TM: in the eyes of the monks of that monastery, most people in India had ceased to meditate properly as well.
A private religious school is entitled to teach its religion. The Catholic school could have required everyone to attend mass if it wanted to.
That said, I don’t think a public school is required to organize activities for opt-out students that the students will regard as similarly imteresting or as having similar opportunities for socializing. If a school lets students opt out of being taught sex education at their parents’ request, for example, it has no obligation to show the opt-out students pictures they would regard as similarly interesting and stimulating.
There are costs to maintaining a minority religion. Some of those costs just have to be born by the religion’s members.
Yes, I am pretty sure I acknowledged this.
Spoken like a true Christian Nationalist, for whom the First Amendment uniquely applies.
I see you chose to skip over the example I used. You didn’t read it? In the example, the Christian nationalists are the “minority religion” people getting the short stick. I’m saying that when Christian Nationalists opt out of a liberal school district’s programs, the liberal school district has no obligation to keep them entertained or give them a comparable educational experience. The Christian Nationalists are the ones who have to put up with the costs. Totally works in both directions.
Since sex education is not religious instruction, and there is no question of whether objecting students are being "coerced" into religious practice by having to attend it, I'd assumed you had merely drawn an inapposite comparison to try to intuition-pump to a conclusion you deemed acceptable. It happens a lot here.
Also, it's a bit odd to describe Christian Nationalists with a hang-up about sex as a "minority religion." I figured you were referring to my being an atheist in a predominantly Catholic environment.
To be clear - parents may object to their student learning about sex in public schools, on religious grounds. But that is a free exercise question, not an Establishment Clause one. We don't have to worry that a sex-education alternative is in some sense punitively "boring," because there's no argument that we could be trying to "coerce" the opt-out students into a religious practice.
Well, lunch is not religious instruction, so by that standard school is not violating anyone’s free exercise rights if it requires all students including Jewish and Muslim ones to eat everything on their plate at lunch, including the pork.
It’s a highly relevant example. For Free Exercise claims, the question is whether or not to allow an individual to opt out. The analysis looks at whether something is religion or not from the point of view of the claimant, so if the claimant believes sex education or eating pork violates their religious beliefs, then basically it does.
But Establishment Clause claims, whether a school can do a program at all, use a legally-created, court-made definition of what is or is not religion. And by that definition, there is no problem with a school serving pork (or doing sex education) in general.
You seem to be conflating the two. You seem to be arguing that your definition of “religion,” and also what upsets you personally, ought to apply to everyone, to both kinds of claims.
The Free Exercise Clause is in general not concerned with people’s discomfort. It is concerned with whether people are being made to violate their religious beliefs. The state can let them opt out without having to make them perfectly whole, so it can let them simply sit in a room to avoid the activity rather than do something interesting. And that’s OK.
And if you don’t have any religious beliefs, then your religious beliefs cannot be violated. I understand you object to this, and rather strongly. But your emotionally-based argument is beside the point.
If you aren’t driving a car, the automative laws applicable to the rights and duties of drivers don’t apply to you. It just doesn’t matter that emotionally, when you are a passenger in a car you feel like a driver and you feel that for this reason the law ought to treat you the same. The purpose of the automotive laws is simply not to address your feelings. It’s not about your feelings. It doesn’t really care about them. It’s about a different subject entirely.
You may like it. You may not. But the same is true of the Establishment and Free Exercise Clauses. For the Establishment Clause, the question of whether coercion exists, like all Establishment Clause matters, is determined by objective criteria, often based on notions of how an average or reasonable person might regard things. How you uourself personally feel doesn’t really matter.
And that means your feelings don’t count for anything. They don’t count for Free Exercise Claims because only religious belief violation, not feelings, count for them, and nothing violates your religious beliefs. And they don’t count for Establishment Clause claims because only the views of an average or reasonable person, not the views of the person who hates the activity the most — only the middle and not the extreme — count towards how bothersome or coercive an activity is legally considered to be.
Surprisingly, most of this response is just... saying what I was saying to you. I ignored your "sex education opt-out" example because, in that case, people opt-out for free exercise reasons; whereas the question of whether one feels "coerced" into religious observance in "prayer time" is an Establishment Clause question. You were the one originally conflating the two standards. I was the one pointing that out.
Atheistic and conscientious beliefs are protected by the First Amendment just as much as traditionally "doctrinal" religious belief systems. That's not an emotionally-based claim. It might be a soon-obsolete feature of First Amendment law, but (last I checked) it was still the case.
Now - perhaps you're referring to a separate line of comments, where I talk about various "offenses" to my atheistic sensibilities. But the point I'm making there is not whether a cross on public land in some way violates my "free exercise" rights or even properly constitutes an Establishment Clause problem, but rather has to do with the fact that religiously-inspired "harms" are often so nebulous and silly. No one much cares (as you do not) that I have to live under the constant drumbeat of pro-Christian indoctrination in public life and tolerate their writing their beliefs across our codebooks. That's just not a cognizable harm, in their (or your) view. But from my perspective it's no different than the difference a high school coach feels between being able to pray after a game in his office vs. at the fifty-yard line - which is something we treat as worthy of Constitutional Notice.
It's kind of absurd.
But if you'd like to steer the atheistic sensibility I've described back to a cognizable First Amendment claim, the example I'd provide would be whether I, as an employer, can be expected to accommodate the religious beliefs and practices of religious employees whose beliefs are deeply abhorrent to my long-held, sincere moral beliefs. If I am an atheist who believes in the worth and dignity of my LGBT employees, customers, and clients, to what extent can I be required to accommodate the religious beliefs of a Christian who refuses to work with them or provide services to them, on religious grounds? Why should their religious beliefs take precedence over my own?
Like it or not, and I understand you don’t, someone getting your child to make a religious statement in a foreign language is considered coercion from the point of view of a neutral person, while you having to listen to a legislative chaplain make a prayer at the opening of the city council is not. The difference has a very rational basis, even if you disagree with it. Society classifies tricking somebody into saying or doing something they wouldn’t say or do if they knew as fraud, a kind of coercion, while simply listening to someone else say something one doesn’t want to hear is not generally classified as coercion.
Duolingo coerced me when it taught me to say "hello to you too" in Irish?
Huh. You learn something new everyday.
Does your "neutral person" also think D&D is Satanic and that there are two types of people in the world: straight people and political people?
What Williams describes happen ed to him during the ceremony is not what I recall happening in the 8 or so times I witnessed the ceremony in teh 49.9 years I've been doing TM.
The only "Sanskrit word" the TM student is required to repeat is the mantra itself, which has no meaning as far as both TM teacher and TM student are concerned and the only reason why the student is asked to repeat that mantra aloud is in teh context of learning the pronunciation of that meaningless (to both of them) wordfrom the TM teacher.
TM mantras are considered bija, which are meaningless sounds whose effect during meditation is based on the sound (or vibration) itself and whatever meaning they might be assigned is merely an attempt to describe the effect the sound has.
The most famous bija mantra is Om, which is associated with a specific deity, Para Brahman, which is described thusly in Wikipedia:
*Para Brahman (Sanskrit: परब्रह्म, romanized: parabrahma) in Hindu philosophy is the "Supreme Brahman" that which is beyond all descriptions and conceptualisations. It is described as the formless (in the sense that it is devoid of Maya) that eternally pervades everything, everywhere in the universe and whatever is beyond.*
In the Mandukya Upanishad, the "meaning" of the bija mantra Om is described thusly:
*All is OM: Hari Om. The whole universe is the syllable Om. Everything that was, is, or will be, verily is Om. All that which transcends time, space, and causation is also Om.*
“The fourth, Turiya, is soundless: unutterable, the cessation of all phenomena, even of bliss. It is nondual (advaita) reality — one without a second. Thus Om is the ātman, is the real or true Self. One who knows thus, merges the self in the Universal Consciousness.”
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So, whenever a person whose mantra is Om, meditates, that is the "deity" evoked, with the meaning behind it. Tradition about mantras holds that when you meditate, the so-called meaning starts to manifest.
Om, incidentally, is NOT a TM mantra, but the meanings and so on associated with the TM mantras in at least one tradition are of like nature.
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This is why it is silly to say that TM mantras have meaning in a Western sense. Their "meaning" is the alleged effect that using them during meditation has on the brain.
And in fact, trying to learn that meaning on an intellectual level is considered antithetical to hte process of TM itself, which merely allows the brain to rest more deeply than usual, heading in teh direction of complete resting where the brain ceases to be aware of anythign at all even though it remains in alert mode (which is quite different than what happens during dreamless sleep).
In Quiet Time schools as conducted through the David Lynch Foundation, meditation is an optional activity. Any school-allowed non-speaking activity like reading, writing, studying, drawing, etc, is allowed during Quiet Time. In the Quiet Time study that prompted the lawsuit, only half the homerooms had learned TM, but the entire school was observing the rest of the Quiet Time protocol, so there was no talking, but in both TMing and non-TMing homerooms, students were free to do anything but talk or leave the classroom.
We used to call that "naptime" in first grade back in the day, except that TM is done sitting up.
There is a dispute over whether it is or is not a religious practice when done outside its religious context. After all, these days art is no longer exclusively religous, and is even permitted in courtrooms, despite its religious origins. Smoking tobacco is similarly no longer considered an exclusively religious activity. People eat crackers and drink wine for completely secular reasons. And yoga is perceived as simply a form of exercise.
What makes this different? Taken outside its religious context like art, smoking, or yoga, and for that matter many other practices that began as religious in character, is it just a secular activity, a relaxation technique?
Maybe, maybe not. But it’s not such an open-and-shut, obvious question as all that.
In a Free Exercise inquiry, the question is whether the activity is prohibited by the claimant’s own religion. How a claimant seeking opt-out regards the activity is the relevant issue. The question is what the claimant believes.
But in an Establishment Clause inquiry, about whether a school can do the activity at all, a more objective legal concept of religion is needed. How the school regards the activity is relevant.
Like eating crackers and drinking wine, the activity is not necessarily inherently religious. Just as crackers and wine can potentially be stripped of associated religious rituals and eaten simply as foods, perhaps the same could be done for transcendental meditation.
It’s not so clear that that’s so, however. A possible argument against is that the adjective “transcendental” itself has potential religious connotations. Perhaps stripping away of religious context has not actually been completely accomplished.
There is a dispute over whether it is or is not a religious practice when done outside its religious context.
Some of the Establishment Clause cases have justices rationalizing away the religious nature of the expression as being "outside its religious context," like you said. Giant crosses on public land, mentions of "God" on money and in the Pledge, etc. Those are deemed not very "religious" anymore because of how commonly used they are, essentially. I find the giant cross being understood as a memorial and not an endorsement of Christianity as particularly ridiculous, since only Christians, to my knowledge, are likely to want a cross as a grave marker or memorial.
The TM ceremony has several purposes, arguably none of which are religious: 1) the Sanskrit text honors the guru of the founder of TM, in whose honor the entire organization was created, and who is credited with inspiring the practice being taught. 2) the ceremony is held to remind both TM teacher and student that this is a practice that comes from a long tradition and should be treated with dignity. 3) the ceremony is meant to put the TM teacher in an altered state conducive to properly teaching meditation, and likewise the student into an altered state conducive to properly learning TM; combine the above, and you get an ancient way of fulfilling the modern educational neuroscience quest of putting the brain of teacher and student in-synch (do a google scholar search on any of these search terms (without quotes) — “interpersonal brain synchrony learning”; “interpersonal brain synchrony teaching”; “interpersonal brain synchrony team” — to find literally tens of thousands of articles in major scientific journals, including Nature, discussing this new passion among educational researchers. The phenomenon of “interpersonal brain synchrony” while teaching/learning/performing-a-task is known to enhance virtually every known human educational or team-based task.
TM is unique in that the EEG coherence that establishes that such brain synchrony is taking place is actually the same way to document that the task itself (proper meditation) is being accomplished.
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The TL;DR: there’s plenty of ways to argue that that ceremony at the heart of the lawsuit fulfills a secular purpose.
A few minutes of my version of "Ohmmmmmmmmmmmmm......."
and that'd be the end of "TM"
As someone who studied Transcendental Meditation in the past (at the direction of my father so it was not optional for me), the plaintiff is flatly wrong on his claim that it is a religious practice. It is entirely secular.
The court is right, however, that that is a factual matter for a jury to determine so to trial this silly case must go.
This sounds right, I think.
If the former student is right, and he was coerced into a religious practice, he should obviously win. But if the school is telling it right (and they sound more believable to me) then they should win.
But that's the job of the jury, so it moves forward.
I was a TM teacher for ten years, and by way of disclosure, I am an expert witness in this case. Part of TM’s marketing plan is to lie about the deep religiosity of the practice. Bob Roth, CEO of the Lynch Foundation, writes in his book Strength in Stillness: The Power of Transcendental Meditation (New York, NY: Simon & Schuster, 2018), p. 53 ...that the mantras used in TM are sounds without meaning. TM mantras do have meanings. They are the Tantric names of Hindu Deities. However, the meanings are withheld from TM students. Maharishi, the featured speaker in 1955 at a Hindu religious gathering in Kerala, India, admitted that not only are TM mantras the names of Hindu deities but they are meant to invoke the influence of Hindu gods in the life of the practitioner: “But we do not select the sound at random. We do not select any sound like “mike,” flower, table, pen, wail, etc. because such ordinary sounds can do nothing more than merely sharpening the mind . . . For our practice, we select only the suitable mantras of personal gods. Such mantras fetch to us the grace of personal gods.” (Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, Beacon Light of the Himalayas, 3 of 4. Available online at http://minet.org/www.trancenet.net/secrets/beacon/beacon1.shtml I had two advanced TM mantra techniques before my first teacher training course. An additional Sanskrit word was added to my then-existing mantra each time. The first advanced technique added the Sanskrit word Nemah to my mantra as a suffix. Nemah in Sanskrit means “I bow down.” The second advanced technique added the Sanskrit word Shri as a prefix, meaning “effulgent or radiant.” The whole mantra meant, “To the effulgent (name of deity), I bow down.” I was not told the meanings of either word when I added them to my mantra. I did learn their English definitions in my teacher training course.
TM describes the puja initiation ceremony as simply paying gratitude to those who have preserved the proper teaching of TM. The truth is Maharishi made the whole thing up. Regardless, during the ceremony, the teacher makes seventeen offerings and repeatedly bows before a photo of Maharishi’s long-dead teacher that occupies the centerpiece of an altar. At its conclusion, the student is invited to bow before the image. In my teacher training course, there were videos of Maharishi Mahesh Yogi stating the puja inserted the influence of Hindu deities into TM initiates’ lives. Also, Maharishi reputedly believed the puja created a mystical connection with Guru Dev, Maharishi’s long-dead teacher Swami Brahmananda Saraswati, and ultimately Maharishi as the true teacher/guru. Students are told not to discuss anything they learned during the initiation with anyone, even their parents.
there are myriad ways of interpreting what mantras are and what mantras mean if anything.
The TM presentation about mantras is perfectly valid according to some Hindu traditions and not valid according to others.
THis is what the bija mantra Om "means" according to the Mandukya Upanishad:
*All is OM: Hari Om. The whole universe is the syllable Om. Everything that was, is, or will be, verily is Om. All that which transcends time, space, and causation is also Om.*
Not to mention:
"The fourth, Turiya, is soundless: unutterable, the cessation of all phenomena, even of bliss. It is nondual (advaita) reality — one without a second. Thus Om is the ātman, is the real or true Self. One who knows thus, merges the self in the Universal Consciousness."
As dictionary meanings go, that's not exactly meaningful in any normal sense of the word.
Betcha you, as an "expert witness," didn't mention this in your testimony.
I was surprised years ago to discover from some Christians that I had over a number of years belonged to two religious cults, playing D&D as an undergraduate and studying martial arts. The school probably erred in offering Transcendental Meditation rather than the bland Mindfulness done elsewhere; the difference between Nativity scenes and candy canes/snowmen/bedecked halls, it seems.
What the author of this article does not make clear though it is clear in the first link, this is a lawsuit against THREE groups:
The David Lynch Foundation, for teaching TM; the University of Chicago for doing a study on TM; and the Chicago PUblic School District for letting them do it.
This is a STUDY on the effects of a specific type of meditation.
Other studies are being done on mindfulness; this study was done to see what effects TM specfically has on students.
Note that, on the level of brain activity, TM is exactly the opposite of mindfulness and that whereas mindfulness is meant to train your brain to always be aware, the point of TM is to allow attention to move towards complete cessation of awareness.
The physical difference in brain activity is easy to distinguish scientifically. What this study would do (if it ever reaches publication, which the lawsuit has served to thus far delay for three years) is to help establish what, if any, differences there are between mindfulness and TM on the level of student's behavior, not just brain activity.
A hint: the preliminary finding of the study before the lawsuit hit was that TMing students had 65-70% fewer arrests for violent crime than the non-TMing students. This is a much stronger result than documented by any school study on mindfulness that I have heard of: typically, mindfulness researchers are jumping for joy if there is a 20% reduction in some kind of symptom (in this case arrests for violent crime).
So the question is: should researchers only research the less controversial, but far less effective mindfulness practice, or should they investigate TM as well?
A slight nit about Williams' testimony about what went on during the ceremony. He appears to be misremembering what actually happened.
Note:
1) that this ceremony was first taught to TM teachers starting in 1961 and has been standardized for that entire time, according to everyone who was trained as a TM teacher and later broke away from the TM organization over the past 60+ years.
2) that over the past 50 (as of July) years, I have witnessed this ceremony 8-10 times as it is performed each time a student learns a new or extension of an existing practice, so I'm pretty confident in my recollection over a person who has only seen it once.
3) after the TM teacher performs the ceremony, they say the mantra out loud for the student and there is a brief discussion on how to use it. If there is any Sanskrit that the student is asked to repeat it is that single word that the student repeats out loud until the teacher is satisfied that they are saying it right. The student is not asked to say anything else except the mantra in the process of learning it.
4) traditionally, the first TM mantras learned are known as Bija, and in the meditation tradition that TM comes from, they have no meaning, so characterizing them as a "Sanskrit" word in the usual sense is a stretch. They are meaningless sounds that are comprised of meaningless strings of phonetic elements of Sanskrit.that are used because the same tradition holds that specific string of sounds has a beneficial effect when used in the context of meditation, presumably because they are connected to "the gods" in some way, but there is no requirement to believe in such things as it is the sound itself that is important, and even if a toy accidentally makes that sound, well, the gods are connected to that sound as well. The wikipedia article about Bija#tantric has more details. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bīja#In_Tantra though another entry in Wikipedia says something slightly different, which only shows that within the so-called Hindu religion, there is vast disagreement on such things (Hinduism isn't a single religion, but a set of beliefs and practices with a few common elements, and accepts radically different interpretations of the same source texts as equally valid within that umbrella term)
5) as I said, the meditation tradition TM comes from says that mantras have no meaning, and if you google the search string [maharishi mantra meditation] (without quotes) you will find a short video by TM-founder Maharishi Mahesh Yogi from 50 years ago explaining why this is important to the practice of TM.