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Native American Student Will Get to Wear Eagle Feather to Graduation

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Christian Titman, a Native American senior at Clovis High School, is suing for the right to wear an eagle feather to his high school graduation later this week.  (ACLU Northern California)

Update, Wednesday June 3: A Native American student who sued his Fresno-area school district because it refused to let him wear an eagle feather to his high school graduation will be able to wear the sacred item after all.

Attorneys for Christian Titman and officials with Clovis Unified School District reached an agreement Tuesday night that allows him to wear the feather, said Rebecca Farmer, a spokeswoman for the American Civil Liberties Union of Northern California, one of the groups representing Titman. She provided no other details.

[The Fresno Bee quotes a school district spokeswoman as saying the agreement is “largely consistent with offers previously made by the district to accommodate” Titman’s desire to wear the feather at Thursday’s ceremony.]

That development came after Fresno County Superior Court Judge Donald Black suggested the two parties try to reach a resolution. Titman's lawyers argued in court that his rights to freedom of expression and religion under the state constitution were being violated.

Titman, 18, a member of the Pit River Tribe, said he wants to attach the 5-inch feather he received from his father to the tassel on his cap.

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He wants to mark his achievement and honor his heritage, according to the lawsuit filed in state court Monday. The tribe considers eagle feathers sacred and symbolic of a significant accomplishment.

"The district's refusal to allow a small symbol of religious expression during the graduation ceremony is a misunderstanding of both the spirit and the letter of the law," argued Novella Coleman, an ACLU staff attorney. "The implication that an eagle feather with religious significance is unacceptable or disruptive signals a deep disrespect from the district."

Original post (Tuesday, June 2): A Native American student who sued his San Joaquin Valley school district because it's refusing to let him wear an eagle feather to his high school graduation will ask a judge for an order permitting the sacred item.

Christian Titman's lawyers are expected to argue in Fresno County Superior Court Tuesday that the student's rights to freedom of expression and religion in the state Constitution are being violated.

Titman, 18, a member of the Pit River Tribe, said he wants to attach the 5-inch feather he received from his father to the tassel on his cap at the Clovis High School ceremony set for Thursday in suburban Fresno.

He wants to mark his achievement and to honor his Native American heritage, according to the lawsuit filed Monday. The tribe considers eagle feathers sacred and symbolic of a significant accomplishment.

"The district's refusal to allow a small symbol of religious expression during the graduation ceremony is a misunderstanding of both the spirit and the letter of the law," said Novella Coleman, a staff attorney with the American Civil Liberties Union of Northern California, one of the groups representing Titman. "The implication that an eagle feather with religious significance is unacceptable or disruptive signals a deep disrespect from the district."

A call to the district was not immediately returned.

In a letter to Titman's attorneys, Superintendent Janet Young said the district has a strict graduation dress code intended to show "respect for the formality of the graduation ceremony, unity of the graduating class, and also to avoid disruption of the graduation ceremonies that would likely occur if students were allowed to alter or add on to their graduation cap and gown."

The district has previously refused to allow stoles, leis, rosaries and necklaces on graduation caps and gowns, and its dress code is neutral to any religion, Young said. Titman could wear the eagle feather after the ceremony and take photos with the principal, she said.

The U.S. Supreme Court has held that under the U.S. Constitution, governments don't have to make exceptions to religiously neutral laws that are applied generally, but the issue has not been resolved by the California Supreme Court under the state Constitution, said Aaron Caplan, a professor at Loyola Law School in Los Angeles.

The California Constitution guarantees free exercise and enjoyment of religion, but not if it would lead to actions that are "licentious" or inconsistent with peace or safety. That would seem to favor Titman's argument that he has a right to wear the eagle feather, Caplan said.

"I don't see any reason why displaying an eagle feather at graduation could be considered licentious or inconsistent with the peace or safety of the state," he said.

Titman also wants a declaration that the district cannot prohibit religious symbols or insignia at the ceremony.

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