Bible has been banned in USA district after being deemed ‘too vulgar or violent’ for children

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A Utah school district has banned the Bible for elementary and middle school students after it was determined to be ‘too vulgar’ and ‘too violent’ for younger readers.

 

 

According to Daily Mail, the move came after a parent in the district grew frustrated by other efforts to ban books in schools.

 

 

Officials in the Davis district, a 72,000-student district north of Salt Lake City removed the religious text from elementary and middle schools but will keep it in high schools.

 

A committee with the district reviewed The Good Book after a complaint by a parent, and district officials say the committee is made up of parents, teachers, and administrators.

 

There was also a complaint to remove the Book of Mormon from younger students’ libraries.

 

 

 

District spokesperson Chris Williams confirmed that someone filed a review request for the Book of Mormon but would not say what reasons were listed. Citing a school board privacy policy, he also would not say whether it was from the same person who complained about the Bible.

 

Williams said the district doesn´t differentiate between requests to review books and doesn’t consider whether complaints may be submitted as satire. The reviews are handled by a committee made up of teachers, parents, and administrators in the largely conservative community.

 

 

 

The district has removed other titles, including Sherman Alexie´s ‘The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian’ and John Green´s ‘Looking for Alaska,’ following a 2022 state law requiring districts to include parents in decisions over what constitutes ‘sensitive material.’

 

The committee published its decision about the Bible in an online database of review requests and did not elaborate on its reasoning or which passages it found overly violent or vulgar.

 

 

 

The decision comes as conservative parent activists, including state-based chapters of the group Parents United, descend on school boards and statehouses throughout the United States, sowing alarm about how sex and violence are talked about in schools.

 

 

Because of the district’s privacy policy, it´s unknown who made the request for the Bible to be banned from Davis schools or if they are affiliated with any larger group.

 

A copy of the complaint obtained by The Salt Lake Tribune through a public records request shows that the parent noted the Bible contains instances of incest, prostitution and rape. The complaint derided a ‘bad faith process’ and said the district was ‘ceding our children´s education, First Amendment Rights, and library access’ to Parents United.

 

 

‘Utah Parents United left off one of the most sex-ridden books around: The Bible,’ the parent´s complaint, dated Dec. 11, said. It later went on to add, ‘You´ll no doubt find that the Bible (under state law) has `no serious values for minors´ because it´s pornographic by our new definition.’

 

 

The review committee determined the Bible didn´t qualify under Utah’s definition of what’s pornographic or indecent, which is why it remains in high schools, Williams said. The committee can make its own decisions under the new 2022 state law and has applied different standards based on students´ ages in response to multiple challenges, he said.