Senate narrowly passes bill mandating public schools post, teach Ten Commandments

Share This Article

PIERRE, S.D. (SDBA) โ€” A divided South Dakota Senate approved a bill Tuesday requiring public schools to display the Ten Commandments, setting up what could be a constitutional showdown.

After over an hour of passionate debate over religious freedom and local control, senators voted 18-17 to require the biblical laws be posted in every classroom and taught alongside other historical documents.

โ€œMany of us breathed a sigh of relief when we saw the destructive and divisive policies of the last few years come to an end,โ€ said Sen. John Carley, R-Piedmont, who sponsored the bill.

Worried about potential lawsuits, senators adopted an amendment requiring the state to cover schoolsโ€™ legal costs.

โ€œWhen Louisiana adopted this, it was immediately challenged in court,โ€ Sen. David Wheeler, R-Huron,ย warned. โ€œI just donโ€™t want our school districts to have to pay that cost.โ€

The amendment passed on a voice vote.ย 

Sen. Greg Blanc, R-Rapid City, a pastor and lawmaker, argued that children deserve to understand the nationโ€™s religious roots.

โ€œChildren have a right to know the truth about the founding of our great nation,โ€ Blanc said. โ€œThey have a right to know why the founding fathers mentioned belief in God in the Declaration of Independence.โ€

But Sen. Jamie Smith, D-Sioux Falls, drawing on classroom experience as a former teacher, blasted the mandate.

โ€œWeโ€™re sitting here talking about smaller government while forcing schools to put up these displays,โ€ Smith said.

The debate took an emotional turn when Sen. Red Dawn Foster, D-Pine Ridge, sought to include Native American values, citing the painful history of forced Christian education in tribal communities.

โ€œMany see this bill as perpetuating the legacy of the 1868 federal boarding school initiative,โ€ Foster said. Fosterโ€™s amendment failed.

Attorney General Marty Jackley has pledged to defend the law if challenged. Several organizations have offered to donate the required 8-by-14-inch displays.

The bill now heads to the House.


ย 

Similar Stories