Image 01 Image 03

Search

On a campus wracked with anti-Israel activism and antisemitic invective, the connection to an anti-Israel national union raises concerns of a renewed BDS effort: "anti-Israel activists should not be permitted to get in through the union back door what they have been unable to get in through the front door."

Court: “The school’s policy is a trifecta of harm”—it harms the students, it harms the parents, and it harms the plaintiffs "who are compelled to violate the parent’s rights by forcing plaintiffs to conceal information they feel is critical for the welfare of their students---violating plaintiffs’ religious beliefs."

The sincere religious beliefs of Brittany DiOrio, Stephanie Hines, and Kerri Thurber, who were willing to follow safety protocols, were uncontested. The District called their presence an "undue burden." Says Hines: We are “three Christian women that stood up and said this isn’t in accordance with what we believe. That’s where it hurts the most."