Seven families sue to block AR law requiring Ten Commandments display in schools

Originally published June 16, 2025 for the Kansas City Star

Seven Arkansas families of varying faiths are suing the state to block a new law requiring public schools to display the Ten Commandments in classrooms and libraries.

The families said the new law “pressures students into religious observance” of the state’s preference and sends a “religiously divisive message” to students, according to the complaint, filed June 11 in the Western District of Arkansas.

Four Northwest Arkansas school districts — Fayetteville, Springdale, Bentonville and Siloam Springs — are cited as defendants in the complaint.

“We are reviewing the lawsuit and considering our options,” a spokesperson for the attorney general’s office told McClatchy News in a June 13 email.

In April, Arkansas Governor Sarah Huckabee Sanders signed a bill ordering the display of a Protestant version of the Ten Commandments and the motto “In God We Trust” into law.

The complaint asks for an order declaring the law a violation of the First Amendment and an order to enjoin the school districts from complying with the act.

“This law is part of the nationwide Christian Nationalist scheme to win favor for one set of religious views over all others and nonreligion — in a country that promises religious freedom,” Rachel Laser, president and CEO of Americans United for Separation of Church and State, said in a June 11 news release. AU is one of the organizations representing the families, according to the lawsuit.

What families said about the new law

The families bringing the lawsuit represent several differing religious beliefs, including Judaism, atheism and Unitarian Universalism, according to the complaint.

Many of them believe the required display will signal to their children that it is wrong to not be Christian or that they are outsiders for not sharing the same faith, attorneys said.

One of the families of Jewish background said the display will make it difficult for their children to “maintain and express their Jewish identity.”

While they recognize the Ten Commandments as part of their faith, the Protestant version lawmakers want displayed in public schools is contrary to their beliefs, according to the complaint.

“They believe strongly that it is important to teach their children about the Ten Commandments within the context of the Jewish faith,” attorneys said.

Another family, who practices Humanist and atheist traditions, said the displays will remind their child of previous trauma experienced at school due to religious proselytizing.

According to the complaint, a teacher at a different public school got mad at their child “for not believing in God” and told them “the family’s beliefs were wrong.”

This caused the child to feel pressured to “pretend to believe in God while at school,” attorneys said.

“Being subjected every day to the Ten Commandments in every classroom and the library will remind (the child) of this trauma and further pressure (them) to observe, meditate on, venerate, and adopt the religious directives, as well as to suppress any expression of (their) nonreligious beliefs and background,” attorneys said.

While the new law is set to take effect Aug. 5, the families have also filed a motion for preliminary injunction asking the court to temporarily prevent implementation while the lawsuit is pending, according to a news release.

Similar lawsuits filed

The Arkansas lawsuit is the latest in a string of federal cases examining the constitutional separation of church and state.

In May, groups sued the state of Texas over a similar law requiring public schools to display the Ten Commandments, according to a May 29 American Civil Liberties Union news release.

In November, a federal district court blocked a Louisiana law ordering the Ten Commandments to be shown in public schools after nine multi-faith families filed a lawsuit, according to a Nov. 12 ACLU news release.

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