MINERSVILLE
SCHOOL DISTRICT, BOARD OF EDUCATION OF MINERSVILLE SCHOOL
DISTRICT, ET AL. v. GOBITIS ET AL.
No. 690
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
310 U.S. 586; 60 S. Ct. 1010; 1940 U.S. LEXIS 1136; 84 L.
Ed. 1375; 17 Ohio Op. 417; 127 A.L.R. 1493
April 25, 1940, Argued
June 3, 1940, Decided
PRIOR HISTORY: [***1]
OPINION: [*591] [**1011] MR. JUSTICE
FRANKFURTER delivered the opinion of the Court.
A grave responsibility confronts this Court whenever in course of litigation it
must reconcile the conflicting claims of liberty and authority. But when the
liberty invoked is liberty of conscience, and the authority is authority to
safeguard the nation's fellowship, judicial conscience is put to its severest
test. Of such a nature is the present controversy.
[1]
Lillian Gobitis, aged twelve, and her brother William, aged ten, were expelled
from the public schools of Minersville, Pennsylvania, for refusing to salute
the national flag as part of a daily school exercise. The local Board of
Education required both teachers and pupils to participate in this ceremony.
The ceremony is a familiar one. The right hand is placed on the breast and the
following pledge recited in unison: "I pledge allegiance to my flag, and
to the Republic for which it stands; one nation indivisible, with liberty and
justice for all." While the words are [***11] spoken, teachers
and pupils extend their right hands in salute to the flag. The Gobitis family
are affiliated with "Jehovah's Witnesses," for whom the Bible as the
Word of God is the supreme authority. The children [*592] had been
brought up conscientiously to believe that such a gesture of respect for the
flag was forbidden by command of Scripture. n1
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n1 Reliance is especially placed on the following verses from Chapter 20 of
Exodus:
"3. Thou shalt have no other gods before me.
"4. Thou shalt not make unto thee any graven image, or any likeness of any
thing that is in heaven above, or that is in the earth beneath, or that is in
the water under the earth:
"5. Thou shalt not bow down thyself to them, nor serve them: . . ."
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The Gobitis children were of an age for which Pennsylvania makes school
attendance compulsory. Thus they were denied a free education, and their
parents had to put them into private schools. [**1012] To be
relieved of the financial burden thereby entailed, their [***12]
father, on behalf of the children and in his own behalf, brought this suit. He
sought to enjoin the authorities from continuing to exact participation in the
flag-salute ceremony as a condition of his children's attendance at the
Minersville school. After trial of the issues, Judge Maris gave relief in the
District Court, 24 F.Supp. 271, on the basis of a thoughtful opinion at a
preliminary stage of the litigation, 21 F.Supp. 581; his decree was affirmed by
the Circuit Court of Appeals, 108 F.2d 683. Since this decision ran counter to
several per curiam dispositions of this Court, n2 we granted certiorari
to give the matter full reconsideration. 309 U.S. 645. By their able
submissions, the Committee on the Bill of Rights of the American Bar
Association and the American Civil Liberties Union, as friends of the Court,
have helped us to our conclusion.
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n2 Leoles v. Landers, 302 U.S. 656; Hering v. State
Board of Education, 303 U.S. 624; Gabrielli v. Knickerbocker,
306 U.S. 621; Johnson v. Deerfield, 306 U.S. 621; 307 U.S.
650. Compare New York v. Sandstrom, 279 N. Y. 523; 18 N. E.
2d 840; Nicholls v. Mayor and School Committee of Lynn, 7 N.
E. 2d 577 (Mass.).
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[***13]
We must decide whether the requirement of participation in such a ceremony,
exacted from a child who refuses [*593] upon sincere religious
grounds, infringes without due process of law the liberty guaranteed by the
Fourteenth Amendment.
Centuries of strife over the erection of particular dogmas as exclusive or
all-comprehending faiths led to the inclusion of a guarantee for religious
freedom in the Bill of Rights. The First Amendment, and the Fourteenth through
its absorption of the First, sought to guard against repetition of those bitter
religious struggles by prohibiting the establishment of a state religion and by
securing to every sect the free exercise of its faith. So pervasive is the
acceptance of this precious right that its scope is brought into question, as
here, only when the conscience of individuals collides with the felt
necessities of society.
[2]
Certainly the affirmative pursuit of one's convictions about the ultimate
mystery of the universe and man's relation to it is placed beyond the reach of
law. Government may not interfere with organized or individual expression of
belief or disbelief. [***14] Propagation of belief -- or even of
disbelief -- in the supernatural is protected, whether in church or chapel,
mosque or synagogue, tabernacle or meeting-house. Likewise the Constitution
assures generous immunity to the individual from imposition of penalties for
offending, in the course of his own religious activities, the religious views
of others, be they a minority or those who are dominant in government. Cantwell
v. Connecticut, ante, p. 296.
[3]
But the manifold character of man's relations may bring his conception of
religious duty into conflict with the secular interests of his fellow-men. When
does the constitutional guarantee compel exemption from doing what society
thinks necessary for the promotion of some great common end, or from a penalty
for conduct which appears dangerous to the general good? To state the
[*594] problem is to recall the truth that no single principle can
answer all of life's complexities. The right to freedom of religious belief,
however dissident and however obnoxious to the cherished beliefs of others --
even of a majority -- is itself the denial [***15] of an absolute.
But to affirm that the freedom to follow conscience has itself no limits in the
life of a society would deny that very plurality of principles which, as a
matter of history, underlies protection of religious toleration. Compare Mr.
Justice Holmes in Hudson Water Co. v. McCarter, 209 U.S. 349,
355. Our present task, then, as so often the case with courts, is to reconcile
two rights in order to prevent either from destroying the other. But, because
in safeguarding conscience we are dealing with interests [**1013]
so subtle and so dear, every possible leeway should be given to the claims of
religious faith.
In the judicial enforcement of religious freedom we are concerned with a
historic concept. See Mr. Justice Cardozo in Hamilton v. Regents,
293 U.S. at 265. The religious liberty which the Constitution protects has
never excluded legislation of general scope not directed against doctrinal
loyalties of particular sects. Judicial nullification of legislation cannot be
justified by attributing to the framers of the Bill of Rights views for which
there is no historic warrant. Conscientious scruples have not, in the
[***16] course of the long struggle for religious toleration, relieved
the individual from obedience to a general law not aimed at the promotion or
restriction of religious beliefs. n3 The mere possession of religious
convictions [*595] which contradict the relevant concerns of a
political society does not relieve the citizen from the discharge of political
responsibilities. The necessity for this adjustment has again and again been
recognized. In a number of situations the exertion of political authority has
been sustained, while basic considerations of religious freedom have been left
inviolate. Reynolds v. United States, 98 U.S. 145; Davis
v. Beason, 133 U.S. 333; Selective Draft Law Cases, 245 U.S.
366; Hamilton v. Regents, 293 U.S. 245. In all these cases
the general laws in question, upheld in their application to those who refused
obedience from religious conviction, were manifestations of specific powers of
government deemed by the legislature essential to secure and maintain that
orderly, tranquil, and free society without which religious toleration itself
is unattainable. Nor does the freedom [***17] of speech assured by
Due Process move in a more absolute circle of immunity than that enjoyed by
religious freedom. Even if it were assumed that freedom of speech goes beyond
the historic concept of full opportunity to utter and to disseminate views,
however heretical or offensive to dominant opinion, and includes freedom from
conveying what may be deemed an implied but rejected affirmation, the question
remains whether school children, like the Gobitis children, must be excused
from conduct required of all the other children in the promotion of national
cohesion. We are dealing with an interest inferior to none in the hierarchy of
legal values. National unity is the basis of national security. To deny the
legislature the right to select appropriate means for its attainment presents a
totally different order of problem from that of the propriety of subordinating
the possible ugliness of littered streets to the free expression of opinion
through distribution of handbills. Compare Schneider v. State,
308 U.S. 147.
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n3 Compare II Writings of Thomas Jefferson (Ford ed.) p. 102; 3 Letters and
Other Writings of James Madison, pp. 274, 307-308; 1 Rhode Island Colonial
Records, pp. 378-80; 2 Id. pp. 5-6; Wiener, Roger Williams'
Contribution to Modern Thought, 28 Rhode Island Historical Society Collections,
No. 1; Ernst, The Political Thought of Roger Williams, chap. VII; W. K. Jordan,
The Development of Religious Toleration in England, passim. See Commonwealth
v. Herr, 229 Pa. 132; 78 A. 68.
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[***18]
[*596]
[4]
Situations like the present are phases of the profoundest problem confronting a
democracy -- the problem which Lincoln cast in memorable dilemma: "Must a
government of necessity be too strong for the liberties of its people,
or too weak to maintain its own existence?" No mere textual
reading or logical talisman can solve the dilemma. And when the issue demands
judicial determination, it is not the personal notion of judges of what wise
adjustment requires which must prevail.
Unlike the instances we have cited, the case before us is not concerned with an
exertion of legislative power for the promotion of some specific need or
interest of secular society -- the protection of the family, the promotion of
health, the common defense, the raising of public revenues to defray the cost
of government. But all these specific activities of government presuppose the
existence of an organized [**1014] political society. The ultimate
foundation of a free society is the binding tie of cohesive sentiment. Such a
sentiment is fostered by all those agencies of the mind and spirit which may
serve [***19] to gather up the traditions of a people, transmit
them from generation to generation, and thereby create that continuity of a
treasured common life which constitutes a civilization. "We live by
symbols." The flag is the symbol of our national unity, transcending all
internal differences, however large, within the framework of the Constitution.
This Court has had occasion to say that ". . . the flag is the symbol of
the Nation's power, the emblem of freedom in its truest, best sense. . . . it
signifies government resting on the consent of the governed; liberty regulated
by law; the protection of the weak against the strong; security against the
exercise of arbitrary power; and absolute safety for free institutions against
foreign aggression." Halter v. Nebraska, 205 U.S. 34,
43. And see [*597] United States v. Gettysburg
Electric Ry. Co., 160 U.S. 668. n4
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n4 For the origin and history of the American flag, see 8 Journals of the
Continental Congress, p. 464; 22 Id., pp. 338-40; Annals of Congress,
15th Cong., 1st Sess., Vol. 1, pp. 566 et seq.; Id., Vol. 2, pp. 1458 et
seq.
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[***20]
The case before us must be viewed as though the legislature of Pennsylvania had
itself formally directed the flag-salute for the children of Minersville; had
made no exemption for children whose parents were possessed of conscientious
scruples like those of the Gobitis family; and had indicated its belief in the
desirable ends to be secured by having its public school children share a
common experience at those periods of development when their minds are
supposedly receptive to its assimilation, by an exercise appropriate in time
and place and setting, and one designed to evoke in them appreciation of the
nation's hopes and dreams, its sufferings and sacrifices. The precise issue,
then, for us to decide is whether the legislatures of the various states and
the authorities in a thousand counties and school districts of this country are
barred from determining the appropriateness of various means to evoke that
unifying sentiment without which there can ultimately be no liberties, civil or
religious. n5 To stigmatize legislative judgment in providing for this
universal gesture of respect for the symbol of our national life in the setting
of the common school as a lawless [***21] inroad on that freedom of
conscience which the Constitution protects, would amount to no less than the
pronouncement of pedagogical and psychological dogma in a field where courts
possess no marked and certainly no [*598] controlling competence.
The influences which help toward a common feeling for the common country are
manifold. Some may seem harsh and others no doubt are foolish. Surely, however,
the end is legitimate. And the effective means for its attainment are still so
uncertain and so unauthenticated by science as to preclude us from putting the
widely prevalent belief in flag-saluting beyond the pale of legislative power.
It mocks reason and denies our whole history to find in the allowance of a
requirement to salute our flag on fitting occasions the seeds of sanction for
obeisance to a leader.
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n5 Compare Balfour, Introduction to Bagehot's English Constitution, p. XXII;
Santayana, Character and Opinion in the United States, pp. 110-11.
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[5]
[***22] The wisdom of training children in patriotic impulses by
those compulsions which necessarily pervade so much of the educational process
is not for our independent judgment. Even were we convinced of the folly of
such a measure, such belief would be no proof of its unconstitutionality. For
ourselves, we might be tempted to say that the deepest patriotism is best
engendered by giving unfettered scope to the most crochety beliefs. Perhaps it is
best, even from the standpoint of those interests which ordinances like the one
under review seek to promote, to give to the least popular sect leave from
conformities like those here in issue. But the courtroom is not the arena for
debating issues of educational policy. It is not our province to choose among
competing considerations in the subtle process of securing effective loyalty to
the traditional ideals [**1015] of democracy, while respecting at
the same time individual idiosyncracies among a people so diversified in racial
origins and religious allegiances. So to hold would in effect make us the
school board for the country. That authority has not been given to this Court,
nor should we assume it.
We are dealing here with [***23] the formative period in the
development of citizenship. Great diversity of psychological and ethical
opinion exists among us concerning the best way to train children for their
place in society. Because [*599] of these differences and because
of reluctance to permit a single, iron-cast system of education to be imposed
upon a nation compounded of so many strains, we have held that, even though
public education is one of our most cherished democratic institutions, the Bill
of Rights bars a state from compelling all children to attend the public
schools. Pierce v. Society of Sisters, 268 U.S. 510. But it
is a very different thing for this Court to exercise censorship over the
conviction of legislatures that a particular program or exercise will best
promote in the minds of children who attend the common schools an attachment to
the institutions of their country.
What the school authorities are really asserting is the right to awaken in the
child's mind considerations as to the significance of the flag contrary to
those implanted by the parent. In such an attempt the state is normally at a
disadvantage in competing with the parent's authority, so long
[***24] -- and this is the vital aspect of religious toleration --
as parents are unmolested in their right to counteract by their own
persuasiveness the wisdom and rightness of those loyalties which the state's
educational system is seeking to promote. Except where the transgression of
constitutional liberty is too plain for argument, personal freedom is best
maintained -- so long as the remedial channels of the democratic process remain
open and unobstructed n6 -- when it is ingrained in a people's habits and not
enforced against popular policy by the coercion of adjudicated law. That the
flag-salute is an allowable portion of a school program for those who do not
invoke conscientious scruples is surely not debatable. But for us to insist
that, though the ceremony may be required, exceptional immunity must be
[*600] given to dissidents, is to maintain that there is no basis
for a legislative judgment that such an exemption might introduce elements of
difficulty into the school discipline, might cast doubts in the minds of the
other children which would themselves weaken the effect of the exercise.
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n6 In cases like Fiske v. Kansas, 274 U.S. 380; De Jonge
v. Oregon, 299 U.S. 353; Lovell v. Griffin, 303 U.S.
444; Hague v. C. I. O., 307 U.S. 496, and Schneider
v. State, 308 U.S. 147, the Court was concerned with restrictions
cutting off appropriate means through which, in a free society, the processes
of popular rule may effectively function.
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[***25]
The preciousness of the family relation, the authority and independence which
give dignity to parenthood, indeed the enjoyment of all freedom, presuppose the
kind of ordered society which is summarized by our flag. A society which is
dedicated to the preservation of these ultimate values of civilization may in
self-protection utilize the educational process for inculcating those almost
unconscious feelings which bind men together in a comprehending loyalty,
whatever may be their lesser differences and difficulties. That is to say, the
process may be utilized so long as men's right to believe as they please, to
win others to their way of belief, and their right to assemble in their chosen
places of worship for the devotional ceremonies of their faith, are all fully respected.
Judicial review, itself a limitation on popular government, is a fundamental
part of our constitutional scheme. But to the legislature no less than to
courts is committed the guardianship of deeply-cherished liberties. See Missouri,
K. & T. Ry. Co. v. May, 194 U.S. 267, 270. Where all the
effective means of inducing political changes are left free from interference,
education in the [***26] abandonment of foolish legislation
[**1016] is itself a training in liberty. To fight out the wise use
of legislative authority in the forum of public opinion and before legislative
assemblies rather than to transfer such a contest to the judicial arena, serves
to vindicate the self-confidence of a free people. n7
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n7 It is to be noted that the Congress has not entered the field of legislation
here under consideration.
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Reversed.
[*601] MR. JUSTICE McREYNOLDS concurs in the result.
DISSENTBY: STONE
DISSENT: MR. JUSTICE STONE, dissenting:
I think the judgment below should be affirmed.
Two youths, now fifteen and sixteen years of age, are by the judgment of this Court
held liable to expulsion from the public schools and to denial of all publicly
supported educational privileges because of their refusal to yield to the
compulsion of a law which commands their participation in a school ceremony
contrary to their religious convictions. They and their father are citizens and
have not exhibited by any action [***27] or statement of opinion,
any disloyalty to the Government of the United States. They are ready and
willing to obey all its laws which do not conflict with what they sincerely
believe to be the higher commandments of God. It is not doubted that these
convictions are religious, that they are genuine, or that the refusal to yield
to the compulsion of the law is in good faith and with all sincerity. It would be
a denial of their faith as well as the teachings of most religions to say that
children of their age could not have religious convictions.
The law which is thus sustained is unique in the history of Anglo-American
legislation. It does more than suppress freedom of speech and more than
prohibit the free exercise of religion, which concededly are forbidden by the
First Amendment and are violations of the liberty guaranteed by the Fourteenth.
For by this law the state seeks to coerce these children to express a sentiment
which, as they interpret it, they do not entertain, and which violates their
deepest religious convictions. It is not denied that such compulsion is a
prohibited infringement of personal liberty, freedom of speech and religion,
guaranteed by the [***28] Bill of Rights, except in so far as it
may be justified and supported as a proper exercise of the state's power over
public education. Since the state, [*602] in competition with
parents, may through teaching in the public schools indoctrinate the minds of
the young, it is said that in aid of its undertaking to inspire loyalty and
devotion to constituted authority and the flag which symbolizes it, it may
coerce the pupil to make affirmation contrary to his belief and in violation of
his religious faith. And, finally, it is said that since the Minersville School
Board and others are of the opinion that the country will be better served by
conformity than by the observance of religious liberty which the Constitution
prescribes, the courts are not free to pass judgment on the Board's choice.
Concededly the constitutional guaranties of personal liberty are not always
absolutes. Government has a right to survive and powers conferred upon it are
not necessarily set at naught by the express prohibitions of the Bill of
Rights. It may make war and raise armies. To that end it may compel citizens to
give military service, Selective Draft Law Cases, 245 U.S. 366,
[***29] and subject them to military training despite their
religious objections. Hamilton v. Regents, 293 U.S. 245. It
may suppress religious practices dangerous to morals, and presumably those also
which are inimical to public safety, health and good order. Davis v. Beason,
133 U.S. 333. But it is a long step, and one which I am unable to take, to the
position that government may, as a supposed educational measure and as a means
of disciplining the young, compel public affirmations which violate their
religious conscience.
The very fact that we have constitutional guaranties of civil liberties and the
[**1017] specificity of their command where freedom of speech and
of religion are concerned require some accommodation of the powers which
government normally exercises, when no question of civil liberty is involved,
to the constitutional demand that those liberties be protected against the
action of government [*603] itself. The state concededly has power
to require and control the education of its citizens, but it cannot by a
general law compelling attendance at public schools preclude attendance at a
private school adequate in its [***30] instruction, where the
parent seeks to secure for the child the benefits of religious instruction not
provided by the public school. Pierce v. Society of Sisters,
268 U.S. 510. And only recently we have held that the state's authority to
control its public streets by generally applicable regulations is not an
absolute to which free speech must yield, and cannot be made the medium of its
suppression, Hague v. Committee for Industrial Organization,
307 U.S. 496, 514, et seq., any more than can its authority to
penalize littering of the streets by a general law be used to suppress the
distribution of handbills as a means of communicating ideas to their
recipients. Schneider v. State, 308 U.S. 147.
In these cases it was pointed out that where there are competing demands of the
interests of government and of liberty under the Constitution, and where the
performance of governmental functions is brought into conflict with specific
constitutional restrictions, there must, when that is possible, be reasonable
accommodation between them so as to preserve the essentials of both and that it
is the function of [***31] courts to determine whether such
accommodation is reasonably possible. In the cases just mentioned the Court was
of opinion that there were ways enough to secure the legitimate state end
without infringing the asserted immunity, or that the inconvenience caused by
the inability to secure that end satisfactorily through other means, did not
outweigh freedom of speech or religion. So here, even if we believe that such
compulsions will contribute to national unity, there are other ways to teach
loyalty and patriotism which are the sources of national unity, than by
compelling the pupil to affirm that which he does not believe and by
[*604] commanding a form of affirmance which violates his religious
convictions. Without recourse to such compulsion the state is free to compel
attendance at school and require teaching by instruction and study of all in
our history and in the structure and organization of our government, including
the guaranties of civil liberty which tend to inspire patriotism and love of
country. I cannot say that government here is deprived of any interest or
function which it is entitled to maintain at the expense of the protection of
civil liberties by requiring [***32] it to resort to the
alternatives which do not coerce an affirmation of belief.
The guaranties of civil liberty are but guaranties of freedom of the human mind
and spirit and of reasonable freedom and opportunity to express them. They
presuppose the right of the individual to hold such opinions as he will and to
give them reasonably free expression, and his freedom, and that of the state as
well, to teach and persuade others by the communication of ideas. The very
essence of the liberty which they guaranty is the freedom of the individual
from compulsion as to what he shall think and what he shall say, at least where
the compulsion is to bear false witness to his religion. If these guaranties
are to have any meaning they must, I think, be deemed to withhold from the
state any authority to compel belief or the expression of it where that
expression violates religious convictions, whatever may be the legislative view
of the desirability of such compulsion.
History teaches us that there have been but few infringements of personal
liberty by the state which have not been justified, as they are here, in the
name of righteousness and the public good, and few which have not been
directed, [***33] as they are now, at politically helpless
minorities. The framers were not unaware that under the system which they
created most governmental curtailments [*605] of personal liberty
would have the support of a legislative judgment that the public interest would
be better served by its curtailment than by its constitutional protection. I
cannot conceive [**1018] that in prescribing, as limitations upon
the powers of government, the freedom of the mind and spirit secured by the
explicit guaranties of freedom of speech and religion, they intended or rightly
could have left any latitude for a legislative judgment that the compulsory
expression of belief which violates religious convictions would better serve
the public interest than their protection. The Constitution may well elicit
expressions of loyalty to it and to the government which it created, but it
does not command such expressions or otherwise give any indication that
compulsory expressions of loyalty play any such part in our scheme of
government as to override the constitutional protection of freedom of speech
and religion. And while such expressions of loyalty, when voluntarily given,
may promote national unity, [***34] it is quite another matter to
say that their compulsory expression by children in violation of their own and
their parents' religious convictions can be regarded as playing so important a
part in our national unity as to leave school boards free to exact it despite
the constitutional guarantee of freedom of religion. The very terms of the Bill
of Rights preclude, it seems to me, any reconciliation of such compulsions with
the constitutional guaranties by a legislative declaration that they are more
important to the public welfare than the Bill of Rights.
But even if this view be rejected and it is considered that there is some scope
for the determination by legislatures whether the citizen shall be compelled to
give public expression of such sentiments contrary to his religion, I am not
persuaded that we should refrain from passing upon the legislative judgment
"as long as the remedial [*606] channels of the democratic
process remain open and unobstructed." This seems to me no less than the
surrender of the constitutional protection of the liberty of small minorities
to the popular will. We have previously pointed to the importance of a
searching judicial inquiry [***35] into the legislative judgment in
situations where prejudice against discrete and insular minorities may tend to
curtail the operation of those political processes ordinarily to be relied on
to protect minorities. See United States v. Carolene Products Co.,
304 U.S. 144, 152, note 4. And until now we have not hesitated similarly to
scrutinize legislation restricting the civil liberty of racial and religious
minorities although no political process was affected. Meyer v. Nebraska,
262 U.S. 390; Pierce v. Society of Sisters, supra; Farrington
v. Tokushige, 273 U.S. 284. Here we have such a small minority
entertaining in good faith a religious belief, which is such a departure from
the usual course of human conduct, that most persons are disposed to regard it
with little toleration or concern. In such circumstances careful scrutiny of
legislative efforts to secure conformity of belief and opinion by a compulsory
affirmation of the desired belief, is especially needful if civil rights are to
receive any protection. Tested by this standard, I am not prepared to say that
the right of this small and helpless [***36] minority, including
children having a strong religious conviction, whether they understand its
nature or not, to refrain from an expression obnoxious to their religion, is to
be overborne by the interest of the state in maintaining discipline in the
schools.
The Constitution expresses more than the conviction of the people that
democratic processes must be preserved at all costs. It is also an expression
of faith and a command that freedom of mind and spirit must be preserved, which
government must obey, if it is to adhere to that justice and moderation without
which no free government [*607] can exist. For this reason it would
seem that legislation which operates to repress the religious freedom of small
minorities, which is admittedly within the scope of the protection of the Bill
of Rights, must at least be subject to the same judicial scrutiny as
legislation which we have recently held to infringe the constitutional liberty
of religious and racial minorities.
With such scrutiny I cannot say that the inconveniences which may attend some
sensible adjustment of school discipline in order that the religious
convictions of these children may be spared, presents a problem so
[***37] momentous or pressing as to outweigh [**1019]
the freedom from compulsory violation of religious faith which has been thought
worthy of constitutional protection.