
‘Horrendous’ religious freedom violation leads to payout by Chicago Public Schools
(The Center Square) – A court-approved settlement of over $2.6 million is being paid to 207 former Chicago Public School students who were required to participate in a Transcendental Meditation program during class.
The settlement approved by U.S. District Court Judge Matthew Kennelly requires the Chicago Board of Education and the New York-based David Lynch Foundation to pay $100,000 to the lead plaintiff and from $3,000 to $9,500 each to the remaining students who filed claims.
Attorney John Mauck, partner at Mauck & Baker, said the so-called “Quiet Time” program was a horrendous violation of religious freedom.
“The David Lynch Foundation, which promotes what they call ‘Transcendental Meditation,’ which is really totally Hindu worship and Hindu meditation, worked its way into the Chicago schools for a number of years,” Mauch explained.
Mauck said students were coerced to go through a Hindu initiation ceremony with offerings to a guru and repeat mantras with the names of Hindu deities.
“Another student was told, ‘If you don’t kneel before the picture of the guru during your initiation ceremony, it could affect your eligibility on the girls basketball team,’” Mauck related.
Mauck said students were instructed not to tell their parents, especially if the parents were religious.
“So parents were kept in the dark. Of course, some students didn’t obey that restriction and the parents eventually found out,” Mauck said.
Mauck said parents got involved, and the school board eventually dropped the program when the Transcendental Meditation group refused to stop holding the Hindu initiation ceremony.
Mauck said the court certified 773 students who had been required to participate in the program. More than 200 filed claims, and Mauck said those students are receiving checks between $3,000 and $9,400 each.
Citing the recent Mahmoud v. Taylor decision, Mauck said the U.S. Supreme Court has reemphasized parental control over religious education of students.
“The parents have an opt-out, and they need to be informed if there are religiously-controversial teachings going on,” Mauck explained.
Mauck said he was not aware of similar cases in Illinois, but there have been cases in California, Massachusetts, New York and “a lot in New Jersey.”
Mauck said Transcendental Meditation is out of Chicago schools, but parents should find out if similar programs are happening in their schools.
Latest News Stories

Illinois quick hits: Mine manager pleads guilty; Johnson issues food executive order

Op-Ed: Chicago-area transit needs an intervention, not another fix

WATCH: ‘Partisans’ who want to should ‘get up and move’ from Illinois, Pritzker says

Beecher Officials Address Mildew Discovery in Elementary School Classrooms

Beecher Residents Confront Village Board Over “War Zone” Construction Site

Victims identified in Minneapolis Catholic school shooting

Pentagon to build new task force to counter drone threats

‘Horrendous’ religious freedom violation leads to payout by Chicago Public Schools

Extended Secret Service protection canceled for Kamala Harris

Du Quoin State Fair gets $50M as senator defends two state fairs in Illinois

WATCH: Pritzker alleges Trump election interference; tells disgruntled residents to move

Illinois quick hits: Foreign national indicted for fraud; Chicago Public Schools budget approved
