School weighs Satanic colouring book

A group has submitted a Satanic colouring book and fact sheets for children at Florida schools to challenge a practice of allowing Bibles in school.

The Satanic Children's Big Book of Activities. (Image: Satanic Temple)

The Satanic Children's Big Book of Activities. (Image: Satanic Temple)

The Satanic Temple has submitted a Satanic colouring book and two fact sheets to schools in the US state of Florida, requesting permission to give them out to students in January.

The colouring book features cartoon children performing Satanic rituals and drawing pentagrams in school, along with a word search for words such as "acceptance" and "friends" and a maze to reach the Necronmicon, a fabled occult spellbook.

The children in the book wear Satanic symbols on their shirts and spread anti-bullying and religious tolerance messages. A colouring page features a girl reading in a study filled with Satanic art, books and symbols. A connect-the-dots sheet creates a pentagram.

Orange County Public Schools counsel Woody Rodriguez said legal staff would review the materials, as it did for a previous atheist group that distributed some materials to Orange students. There is no set timeline for a decision.

The school board has discussed changing its policy that allows the distribution of religious materials on tables inside high schools, but no action has been taken, and no changes are currently planned.

"We definitely, definitely will not be distributing those materials until we have a work session on that issue" and give Rodriguez policy direction, said school board chair Bill Sublette.

A Bible distribution by a group called World Changers of Florida, most recently held in January, set off a series of lawsuits by an atheist group seeking to stop the practice.

The Satanic Temple is a loosely organised national group that has formed an alliance with atheist groups to make a statement against the practice of allowing the Bible distributions. The same group has gotten much sought-after publicity by trying to get a statute of Baphomet installed at the Oklahoma Capitol.

"To be sure, if our materials are consistent with their standards, they can't simply deny our literature because of its religious viewpoint," said a Satanic Temple spokesman who goes by the name Lucien Greaves.

The Satanic Temple supports social justice and sees Satan as the "eternal rebel against the ultimate tyrant", Greaves said.


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