On the Front Lines of the Culture Wars

On the Front Lines of the Culture Wars

Local attorney takes on the ACLU in defense of his high school

The American Civil Liberties Union has threatened to sue Cranston High School West in Rhode Island — warning that resisting the no-religion agenda of the ACLU can be extremely expensive.

Attorney Cavanagh

So, a local alumnus who happens to be a First Amendment attorney stepped up and said he’d defend the school for free. Joseph V. Cavanagh Jr. told the Cranston school board that he wouldn’t charge his alma mater a cent — and furthermore, he had lined up financial backing from the Becket Fund, Washington, D.C., public interest group dedicated to defending religious expression.  The fund is named after history’s Thomas Becket who died rather than give in to King Henry II’s attempts to manipulate the church.

How had the school violated students’ civil liberties? Since 1963, a banner has born this message, written 40 years ago by a member of the Student Council:

Our Heavenly Father,
Grant us each day the desire to do our best,
To grow mentally and morally as well as physically,
To be kind and helpful to our classmates and teachers,
To be honest with ourselves as well as with others,
Help us to be good sports and smile when we lose as well as when we win,
Teach us the value of true friendship,
Help us always to conduct ourselves so as to bring credit to Cranston High School West.
Amen

The ACLU cannot tolerate such public references to “Our Heavenly Father” or the public utterance of “Amen” — never mind that banishing such religious speech is in itself a violation of civil liberties, a principle on which Rhode Island was founded.

“If he were here today, Roger Williams, who founded Providence in 1636, might think he was back in tyrannical Massachusetts, from which he had fled,” writes columnist Robert Knight for the Daily Caller online newsite.

The ACLU first threatened Cranston  school officials in July 2010 with a threatening letter from the ACLU of Rhode Island’s Executive Director Peter Brown. He said stating that one person was “extremely concerned and troubled” by the banner. The school board discussed the letter, then on March 7 in a public meeting attended by 150 residents, voted 4 to 3 to keep the banner. The Providence Journal newspaper notes that the board also considered a petition with more than 4,000 names backing the banner.

Cranston High School West

In response, the ACLU warned the school that fighting the matter would be expensive and unwise considering “the school district’s ongoing and severe budgetary problems, which has led to layoffs and program cuts.”

“Basically, ‘We’ll make you even poorer! You can’t afford this!’ the ACLU screamed,” writes Knight.

So Cranston grad Cavanagh stepped forward. A Harvard graduate who got his law degree from Boston College, he is the managing partner and head of civil litigation and trial practice for the local law firm Blish and Cavanagh.  He has worked on First Amendment cases for local print media and broadcast companies and was named a Rhode Island and New England Super Lawyer from 2007 to 2010.

A precedent must be set, says Cavanagh, who is ready to take the matter all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court. And community leaders are behind him.

The offending banner

“The desire to scrub every reference to God and religious faith from public life, including our schools, is tiresome and irritating,” said Roman Catholic Bishop Thomas J. Tobin. “And in fact it creates another pseudo-religion, secularism, that other people are forced to endure. The ACLU should avoid these silly little squabbles and move on to other more important issues where civil liberties are really threatened.”

The ACLU has a historical hostility toward what the Declaration of Independence describes as “certain unalienable rights” with which Americans are “endowed by their Creator.” The ACLU brags that it is ‘nation’s guardian of liberty, working daily in courts, legislatures and communities to defend and preserve the individual rights and liberties that the Constitution and laws of the United States guarantee everyone in this country.”

That is, unless you are a Christian.

The ACLU insists that “the message of the Establishment Clause is that religious activities must be treated differently from other activities to ensure against governmental support for religion.”

“Utter hokum,” says Knight. The First Amendment’s Establishment Clause says nothing of the sort. Its message is abundantly clear, requiring severe distortion to twist it to fit the ACLU’s agenda. It states: “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof.”

Making a high school in Rhode Island take down a 40-year-old banner made by a student is exactly that — a violation of the guarantee of “free exercise” of our faith.



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Comments read comments(39)
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Charles

posted March 30, 2011 at 8:39 am


The ACLU is always wrong to try to stop people from getting to do things Also when is Wisconsin going to recall the 14 are so Democratcs who left the state not the Repulicans who stayed to help the state



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Patricia

posted March 30, 2011 at 8:40 am


This is for Annie too.

You really don’t have any idea what you are talking about. I really surprised you even read this page. And you said We Christians in your statement which would lead me to believe you are a Christian. REALLY



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Dvilanov

posted March 30, 2011 at 9:14 am


This is just another example of how important it is for us not to keep quiet, but to speak out and defend our Faith. It took less than a 1% of the population to bring this yoke upon us. Wake up America, and smell the coffee. It’s time to speak up! God bless Attorney Cavanagh. May God guide you with His wisdom, and motivate others do the same!!!



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Janet Fisher

posted March 30, 2011 at 9:35 am


I am an American veteran , along with my deceased husband. We fought for our rights to be free.Our families fled from their Homelands to come here to have the rights of freedom to include how they praise our Heavenly Father. Thank you, Joe, for doing the right thing.



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Pierre

posted March 30, 2011 at 9:58 am


I am usually in support of the ACLU standing up for religious freedom. However, in reading this school prayer, I fail to see how it is promoting a government religion, which is what the First Amendment prohibits in my view. If this prayer said, “In Jesus name we Pray”, then I could see why someone might object. Acknowledging a supreme being does not violate the First Amendment, although by its own wording acknowledges a belief in a diety.

My prayers are with Mr. Joseph Cavanagh Jr. in his defense of the right of free expression while not imposing a religion on anyone.

May God Bless America!



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J. Matthews

posted March 30, 2011 at 10:03 am


Ecclesiastes 12:13 Let us hear the conclusion of the whole matter: Fear God, and keep his commandments: for this is the whole duty of man.

Psalm 2:1 Why do the heathen rage, and the people imagine a vain thing?

Psalm 46:6 the heathen raged, the kingdoms were moved: he uttered his voice, the earth melted.

it is no wonder, the Earth is reeling to and fro like a drunkard and there is turmoil all around, for mankind have become LAWLESS drundard, drunk with the cares of this world



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Darla S.

posted March 30, 2011 at 10:40 am


To “Susan Gill” and “Annie” – Susan has it right. By making laws to take expressions of religion out of places and use, the lawmakers & courts are actually violating the First Admendment. If one religion is chosen over another, and this includes atheists, then the lawyers, legislators, and courts are “making a law establishing..”

What the ACLU is doing here in my opinion is the criminal offense of blackmail or extortion – “you do what we say or you will pay”. It kind of goes with the consequences of not having that school prayer given in this article.



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Karen

posted March 30, 2011 at 10:43 am


I am so VERY TIRED of Our Christian rights being taken away by the ACLU and every other non-believer. This country was founded on our right to have religious freedom or not! Christians practice toleratnce of other religions through praying that those who do not know Jesus will come to know Him. How biblical all this is, though. We know what God told us, we would be persecuted for believing in/on His Name and how true. The ACLU is pathetic when they stand to fight something such as this when so many other fights for rights are more worthy than the hanging of a banner!



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Ladybug

posted March 30, 2011 at 10:58 am


GO Mr. Cavanaugh! It’s about time that people who are Christians (Followers of Jesus Christ) stand up and defend our right to express our religion just as those who are expressing their’s. Why should we be quiet about Jesus when we have people yelling about “the creator they beleive in”? Our country was founded on Christian principles and where do people think the laws we have came from? If not for the 10 commandments, there would be no laws to govern us. If we take God out of America, should we then forget the laws established? That would be the next step. Then where would we be if that happened? Will he be my attorney if I ever need one in the same situation? Or recommend someone just as good?



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Jo

posted March 30, 2011 at 12:06 pm


Hooray for Mr. Joseph Cavanagh! Finally, I’m begining to see some hero’s stepping up amongest those that are tearing down. There are others that too are stepping up to what’s going on in this country…like doctors, nurses,attorneys, some Judges and others. This I truly believe is what God has been waiting for…brave people who love Him and are fed up with what’s going on. I know He will stand by them and the more there is that helps, the better its going to get.



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