A senior in high school wanted to construct a wooden altar in a shop class which could later be used for Wiccan rituals. This idea has stirred up quite a debate at the high school in Iowa. Dale Halferty, a teacher of industrial arts from Guthrie Center High School for the past three years, has been put on paid leave since this past Monday after admitting that he told the senior student he could not create an altar in the class.
According to Halferty, he turned the senior student down on the idea because he was “practicing his religion” during class time, and it had nothing to do with having a beef with the student, the district, or any religion. Halferty argues that he told a different student at one time that he could not make a cross during class time because Halferty believes in the separation of church and state. Basically, Halferty says, “We as Christians don’t get to have our say during school time, so why should anyone else.”
School officials disagree with Halferty’s assertion and according to school policy, as well as federal and state laws, students cannot be discriminated against on the basis of their method for expressing religious beliefs through school assignments. The principle and the superintendent of the school placed the teacher on leave until they could consult with the school’s attorney to decide what comes next.
As of this moment 70 out of the school’s 185 students signed a petition last week saying they didn’t want witchcraft practiced in their school. Question is; do the students that are signing the petition really know what witchcraft is? Is it a real understanding of witchcraft that they have or a blown up Hollywood image that the students have of witches? Secondly, I hardly see making an altar a practice of witchcraft so much as it is a making of a tool for the purposes of witchcraft. An adept practitioner knows that any and all tools for witchcraft, including an altar are a mere extension of the practitioner; they are tools that help to harness the magick within the practitioner. Third, it’s perfectly okay for all of the school choirs to sing Christian pieces during the holiday concerts that they put on for parents every year, (I know this because I go to all of my kid’s concerts) but it isn’t okay for a student to make an altar in woodshop? What did this teacher think he was going to do, set up a ritual working right in the shop?
Halferty said he was surprised when the student told him he was a practicing witch. When the student began bringing a book about witchcraft to class he decided to tell him he couldn’t make the altar. Halferty explains “It scares me. I’m a Christian…This witchcraft stuff – it’s terrible for our kids. It takes kids away from what they know and leads them to a dark and violent life. We spend millions of tax dollars trying to save kids from that.”
Really? Millions of dollars are being spent on kids that “need to be saved?” That’s ridiculous. His own ignorance and fear of what witchcraft is all about is the driving force behind this controversy. He’s trying to validate his own thoughts with assumed facts and figures to make himself look better. I’d like to see a list of all the millions of dollars being spent on saving kids from witchcraft and Wicca, a harmless earth-based religion that teaches them to cherish life and all that live. I want to know what party of the school or state budget covers the “saving kids from witchcraft.” This is clearly not an issue of separating the church from state, but it is an issue where Halferty’s fears are a source for student discrimination. This entire incident proves that, in this case, the educator needs to be educated.
Read more on discrimination against Wiccans.