MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
Plaintiff Andrea Metzl (“Metzl”) is a Chicago Public School teacher. She currently teaches learning disabled children at Edge-brook Elementary School. In July 1993, Metzl brought this suit against Robert Leininger, State Superintendent of Education, the Chicago Board of Education, D. Sharon Grant, President of the Chicago Board of Education, and Argie K. Johnson, General Superintendent of the Chicago Public Schools. 1 Metzl alleges that a provision of the Illinois School Code (“School Code”) designating Good Friday as one of twelve state mandated school holidays violates the Establishment Clause of the U.S. Constitution 2 and Article I, Section 3 of the Constitution of the State of Illinois. 3
This matter is now before the court on the parties’ cross-motions for summary judgment. For the reasons stated below, the court declares the challenged portion of the School Code unconstitutional and enters a permanent injunction prohibiting its enforcement. Plaintiffs motion for summary judgment is granted. Defendants’ motion is denied.
Background
Enacted in 1941, Section 24-2 of the School Code designates Good Friday and 11 other days as legal school holidays. 105 ILCS 5/24-2 (1992). 4 Good Friday is consid *741 ered by Christians as one of the holiest days of the liturgical year. A solemn, even mournful day, Good Friday commemorates for Christians, Jesus Christ’s suffering and death on the cross. (Pl.Ex. B at ¶¶ 5-7; Pl.Ex. C at ¶¶ 5-8). 5 Unlike Christmas, Good Friday is generally seen as having no secular components. (Id.). As is the case on all legal school holidays, Illinois public schools are closed on Good Friday. Teachers and other school employees are not required to work and receive no reduction in pay for the holiday. 105 ILCS 5/24-2 (1992). Good Friday, however, is not an official state holiday for Ihinois agencies and offices, 6 and the overwhelming majority of public institutions of higher education in Illinois conduct classes on Good Friday. (PI. Statement of Uncontested Facts at ¶ 15).
Although no legislative history exists explaining the legislature’s purpose in designating Good Friday as a legal school holiday, the parties have uncovered a proclamation issued by the Governor of Illinois in March, 1942, highlighting the significance (at least in his view) of the newly recognized state holiday. The Proclamation reads as follows:
The hallowed traditions of almost two thousand years cluster around the Friday just preceding Easter Sunday. Good Friday, as it has come to be called, is a day charged with especial meaning to multitudes throughout the Christian world.
Good Friday was lately given appropriate statutory recognition in Illinois. By enactment of the last regular session of our General Assembly, the day was made a
Memorial Day, Independence Day, Labor Day, Columbus Day, Veteran’s Day, Thanksgiving Day, and Christmas Day. 105 ILCS 5/24-2 Ü 992).
legal and school holiday throughout the State.
The widespread commemoration of Good Friday, always becoming, is eminently fitting in these times of unusual stress.
NOW, THEREFORE, I, DWIGHT H. Green, Governor of the State of Illinois, by this official proclamation, do hereby direct attention to this significant day, Good Friday, which falls this year on April 3, and commend the secret rites and ceremonies of the occasion to the thoughtful consideration of churchgoers and believers throughout our State.
(Pl.Ex. H).
In addition to Section 24-2, two other sections of the School Code are relevant to the court’s inquiry. First, under Section 26-1(5), “[a]ny child absent from a public school on a particular day ... because the tenets of his religion forbid secular activity on a particular day” is not required to attend school on that day. 105 ILCS 5/26-1(5) (1992). This same section further provides that “nothing in this paragraph 5 shall be construed to limit the right of any school board, at its discretion, to excuse an absence on any other day by observance of a religious holiday.” Id. Under this latter provision, several school districts in suburbs north of Chicago have for some time closed the public schools on the Jewish holidays of Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur when those holidays fall on school days. (Def. Statement of Uncontested Facts at ¶ 9). 7 Finally, the School Code also provides that:
that closes on Good Friday. (PI. Statement of Uncontested Facts at V 15).
*742 Any child enrolled in a public school who is unable, because of the observance of a religious holiday, to attend classes on a particular day ... shall be excused from any examination or any study or work assignments on such ... day. It shall be the responsibility of the teachers and ... administrative officials ... to make available to each child who is absent from school because of the observance of a religious holiday to make up any examination, study or work requirements.... No adverse or prejudicial effects shall result to any child because of his availing himself of the provisions of this section.
105 ILCS 5/26-2b.
Standard of Review
Under Rule 56(c) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, summary judgment is proper “if the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.” As the parties acknowledge, the material facts in this case are undisputed. (Def. Motion for Summary Judgment at 1; PL Motion for Summary Judgment at 1). Summary judgment is appropriate as a matter of law.
Discussion
The First Amendment provides that “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof'....” U.S. Const, amend. I. As the Supreme Court has made clear, the Establishment Clause is much more than a simple pledge that “no single religion will be designated as a state religion.”
School District v. Ball,
Total separation of church and state, however, is neither possible nor desirable.
Lemon v. Kurtzman,
*743
Struggling with the inherent tension contained within the twin religion clauses of the First Amendment, the Court has generally fallen back on the three-part test first enunciated in
Lemon v. Kurtzman
when analyzing alleged violations of the Establishment Clause. To pass the
Lemon
test, a statute or practice which touches upon religion must: (1) have a secular purpose, (2) neither advance nor inhibit religion in its principal or primary effect, and (3) not foster an excessive entanglement with religion.
Lemon,
In recent years, the Supreme Court has refined the inquiry under
Lemon,
directing courts to pay close attention to whether the challenged governmental practice either has the purpose or effect of “endorsing” religion.
See Allegheny,
The Good Friday Cases
In determining whether a state statute designating Good Friday as a legal school holiday violates the Establishment Clause, the court is not writing on a blank slate. Thus, before undertaking the case specific inquiry required under Lemon, the court will review three prior cases in which courts ruled on the constitutionality of state laws declaring Good Friday legal holidays.
This analysis begins with the Ninth Circuit’s majority opinion in
Cammack v. Waihee,
The court then turned to the three-pronged
Lemon
test. Looking first to the purpose of the statute, the court found that nothing in the bill’s legislative history suggested a religious motive for its ultimate passage.
Id.
at 775. Rather, the court found that the statute’s primary purpose was simply to provide for more legal holidays for the state.
Id.
at 776.
9
Under the second prong of the
Lemon
test, the court concluded that the primary effect of the Good Friday Holiday was no more violative of the Establishment Clause than the Sunday closing laws upheld thirty years earlier by the Supreme Court in
McGowan v. Maryland,
In
Griswold Inn, Inc. v. State,
Noting that liquor was available for sale throughout the state of Connecticut on all other state holidays, the court quickly rejected the defendants’ contention that the statutes were motivated by a legitimate concern for the dangers associated with uninhibited alcohol consumption on “a holiday which enjoys state-wide celebration.”
Id.
Looking to the primary effect of the statute’s prohibition, the court found two principal defects. First, the Good Friday prohibition impermissibly gave the state’s “clear stamp of approval” to Christian rites and practice, suggesting an “illegal bias in favor of Protestant and Catholic forms of Christianity over Eastern Orthodox, non-Christian and non religious practices and beliefs.”
Id.
Second, the state’s prohibition on the sale of
*745
alcohol was found to unconstitutionally impose the religious customs of one segment of the population on the entire state.
Id.
Finally, the court held that the challenged statute also ran afoul of the entanglement clause by requiring the state to monitor the observance of a religious holiday and by creating political divisions and debate along religious lines.
Id.
Lastly, in
Mandel v. Hodges,
Application of the Lemon Test
Against this backdrop, the court now turns to the constitutionality of Illinois’ designation of Good Friday as a legal school holiday under the framework provided in Lemon.
A. Purpose
Under the purpose prong of the
Lemon
test, the court “ ‘asks whether [the] government’s actual purpose is to endorse or disapprove of religion’ ”.
Edwards v. Aguillard,
One obvious place to begin when inquiring about a statute’s purpose is its legislative history. What did its drafters have to say about the statute’s purpose? Indeed, in
Wallace,
As the court observed in
Mandel,
Still, courts are generally reluctant to attribute unconstitutional motives to the states, and in the Establishment Clause context, courts will defer to a state’s sincere articulation of a legitimate secular purpose.
Edward.%
However, defendants’ characterization of Section 24-2’s purpose is troubling. As an initial matter, defendants offer scant evidence in support of their broad assertion that if Good Friday were a regular school day, absenteeism would be so great that the schools would be unable to function effectively. In
Texas Monthly, Inc. v. Bullock,
In this case, the State has adduced no evidence that the payment of a sales tax by subscribers to religious periodicals or purchasers of religious books would offend their religious beliefs or inhibit religious activity. The State therefore cannot claim persuasively that its tax exemption is compelled by the Free Exercise Clause in even a single instance, let alone in every case. No concrete need to accommodate religious activity has been shown.
Here, the State relies heavily on certain newspaper articles from the 1940’s describing in general terms the significance of the Easter weekend holidays to the many thousands of Christians in the Chicago area and the efforts made by area churches to accommodate the anticipated flood of worshipers. (Def. Brief at 7-8). Defendants also cite a recent survey of U.S. church membership as well as some anecdotal evidence gleaned from the parties’ depositions which taken together certainly suggest that at least some Christian students and school employees would not attend school if Good Friday were a regular school day. (Def. Brief at 8; Def. Reply at 4-5).
Specifically, defendants cite the results of a survey contained in the 1993 World Almanac *747 which suggest that close to 150 million Americans are members of either Protestant or Roman Catholic churches. (Def. Brief at 8, citing 1993 World Almanac at 718). In terms of deposition testimony, defendants offer the observations of Dr. Philip Price, now the superintendent of Glencoe’s elementary school and formerly a superintendent of a school district in Ohio. Commenting on the lack of a state-wide Good Friday holiday in Ohio, Dr. Price testified that “[d]epending on the district, [the lack of a holiday could be a problem. There were individuals, there were parents that found that to be hardship.” (Def. Reply at 4; Price Dep. at 32). Defendants also cite the deposition testimony of a Skokie School District 68 school official who noted that at least four employees were absent on “Orthodox Good Friday” (a regular school day) for religious reasons. (Def. Brief at 4, citing Fritts Dep. at 16-17).
To assert, based on this evidence, that Illinois public schools would be unable to function if Good Friday were a regular school day is quite a stretch. As plaintiff points out, the Board of Education is the only state agency that is closed on Good Friday and the vast majority of public institutions of higher education hold classes that day. Conspicuously absent from defendants’ case is any indication that any of these institutions or state agencies have suffered as a result of excessive absenteeism by Christian students and employees on Good Friday. While acknowledging that defendants’ efforts were hampered by the simple fact that the Good Friday school holiday has been on the books for more than fifty years, the court finds the evidence presented on this point sorely lacking. Moreover, even if a legitimate showing could be made that particular school districts would be unable to function effectively on Good Friday because of excessive absenteeism, the State’s asserted purpose would still be suspect. School Code Section 26-l(5)’s grant of school-closing discretion to individual school districts (see discussion infra) obviates any need for the declaration of a statewide school holiday on Good Friday.
As Justice Souter explained in his concurring opinion in
Weisman,
— U.S. at-,
Finally, defendants assert that the legitimate accommodation purposes underlying the Good Friday holiday are best seen when this section is placed in the context of the statute as a whole. When evaluated in this light, the State claims that Section 24-2’s designation of Good Friday as a legal school holiday is properly seen as just one of a series of carefully calibrated responses to a range of situations calling for accommodation:
for the religion with the most adherents, Christianity, the public schools are closed state-wide on an important religious holiday ... for larger minority religions, such as Judaism, the School Code authorizes the local district to close completely on days where a significant number might be absent for religious reasons ... for smaller minority religions, the School Code permits the student to miss school on religiously significant days without penalty.
(Def. Reply at 8-9). As discussed below, there is a fine line between a “carefully cali *748 brated response” to accommodation and an impermissible attempt by the state to prioritize or rank religious practices and beliefs — a line which this court believes the State has clearly crossed. Finding that Section 24-2’s designation of Good Friday was primarily motivated by a desire to endorse the values held sacred by one particular religion at the expense of other “minority” religions, the court holds that the challenged portion of the Illinois School Code fails the first prong of the Lemon test.
B. Effect
The second prong of the
Lemon
test looks to the “principal or primary effect” of the challenged statute or practice.
Lemon,
In answering this question, this court is guided by two general principles that have long played a central role in our Establishment Clause jurisprudence. First, the inquiry into the effect of governmental action touching on religion must be conducted with special care when the challenged conduct impacts upon children in their formative years.
Ball,
What to most believers may seem nothing more than a reasonable request that the nonbeliever respect their religious practices, in a school context may appear to the nonbeliever or dissenter to be an attempt to employ the machinery of the State to enforce a religious orthodoxy.
Second, the Establishment Clause prohibits government from conveying a message that religion or a particular religious belief is favored or preferred.
Allegheny,
As one of only twelve legal school holidays in the state of Illinois, Good Friday undeniably occupies a place of distinction in the official state calendar. One need only briefly consider some of the other designated school holidays — such as Martin Luther King, Jr. Day, Memorial Day, or Independence Day— to surmise that a typical Illinois schoolchild might think that the government considers Good Friday to be worthy of special honor. By the same token, non-Christians and Eastern Orthodox students are reminded that their holy days somehow failed to make the grade.
In
Cammack,
the court found that certain secular aspects of Good Friday, at least as celebrated in Hawaii, diluted any official endorsement of Christianity that its designation as an official state holiday might be thought to convey.
Cammack,
This court finds defendants’ argument unpersuasive. As noted above, Good Friday is unique among the State’s twelve legal school holidays for its wholly religious significance. Unlike Christmas or Thanksgiving, which have numerous non-religious connotations, Good Friday has no identifiable secular components. While non-believers are obviously free to pursue their secular interests on Good Friday, they undoubtedly do so with the knowledge that the State has sanctioned the holiday on account of its special religious significance. These -individuals can no more ignore the imprimatur that the State has placed on the Good Friday holiday than could courthouse visitors ignore the significance of the creche at issue in Allegheny. With regard to the McGowan analogy, the dissent in Cammack captured the essential distinction between the Sunday Closing Laws at issue there and the Good Friday holiday challenged here with the following observation:
We need think only of the schoolchild who asks her teacher why she gets Sundays and Good Friday off. The answer must be that the former are days of rest and the latter a commemoration of the death of Jesus Christ.
Cammack,
Defendants attempt to downplay this clear message of endorsement by pointing out that several school districts north of Chicago have traditionally closed schools in their districts on the Jewish Holy Days of Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur, pursuant to 105 ILCS 5/26— 1(5). Although this section of the School Code does not specifically designate these days as official holidays, it has generally been interpreted to allow individual school districts to close school whenever a significant number of students might be absent for religious reasons. 12 Also, as noted previously, for smaller minority religions, the School Code permits the student to miss school on religiously significant days without penalty. ILCS 5/26-1(5). Thus, the State argues that it is incorrect to suggest that it has not afforded adherents of other religions the same deference or respect that it has shown Illinois’ Christians. (Def. Reply at 9).
Again, the court disagrees. While Illinois has indeed made efforts to accommodate the religious needs of its non-Christian schoolchildren, it cannot be denied that it has singled out Christianity for special treatment. By elevating Good Friday to legal school holiday status throughout the state, Illinois has sent a clear message to Christians that as adherents of a majority religion, they are specially entitled to state recognition and accommodations that members of minority religions only qualify for upon demand. This is the very message that the Establishment Clause is intended to prohibit.
Lynch,
C. Entanglement
Finally, like the
Cammack
court, the court here finds that the State’s designation of Good Friday as a legal holiday does not lead to excessive government entanglement with religion. Cases that turn on the entanglement prong of the
Lemon
test typically involve some form of state aid to religious institutions (such as parochial schools) or re
*750
lated schemes requiring state monitoring of religious entities.
See, e.g., Aguilar v. Felton,
Conclusion
The issues raised in this case are important and difficult ones. Indeed, throughout the history of this nation, courts have struggled mightily with the slippery dictates of the First Amendment’s Religion Clauses. Faced with a fifty year old statute with no legislative history, the court’s task here has been especially challenging. Nonetheless, after carefully considering the many thoughtful arguments raised by the litigants in their well written briefs, the court concludes that the challenged portion of the Illinois School Code cannot stand. Finding that Illinois’ designation of Good Friday as a legal school holiday was primarily motivated by a desire to endorse the Christian faith and conveys the impermissible message that Christianity is a favored religion within the state of Illinois, the court declares the challenged portion of Section 24-2 of the Illinois School Code to be unconstitutional and enters a permanent injunction prohibiting its enforcement. Plaintiffs motion for summary judgment is granted. Defendants’ motion is denied.
Notes
. This suit was originally brought as Weinstein v. Edgar, 93 C 1102, by Grace Weinstein who, like Metzl, was a Chicago Public School teacher challenging the constitutionality of the Good Friday school holiday. Some time after filing suit and after considerable discovery had been taken, Weinstein took early retirement. Weinstein then sought to substitute Metzl as a plaintiff in that case. Judge Aspen denied the request and dismissed the case with prejudice. See Minute Order, dated August 17, 1993. When Metzl filed the instant suit, the parties agreed that the discovery conducted in the Weinstein case could be used in this case as well. With the exception of the parties' names, the complaints filed in both cases are virtually identical. (Def. Statement of Uncontested Facts at 1-2).
. The Establishment Clause states that "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion." U.S. Const, amend. I, cl. 1. The Establishmenl Clause is made applicable to the states through the Fourteenth Amendment.
Everson v. Board of Educ.,
. This Section provides in relevant part: "No person shall be required to attend or support any ministry or place of worship against his consent, nor shall any preference be given by law to any religious denomination or mode of worship.” The protections provided under this provision of the Illinois Constitution are generally considered to be coextensive with those offered under the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.
See In re Marriage of Goldman,
. The other legal school holidays are: New Year's Day, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Day, Lincoln’s Birthday, Casimir Pulaski’s Birthday,
. As plaintiff’s expert, Reverend Dean Kelley explains: "Good Friday is not an occasion for frivolity or festivities. Among practicing Christians, having a party or a wedding on Good Friday would be unthinkable.... In many Christian churches, the altar paraments for Good Friday are black, a color used only on that one day of the year (aside from funerals), and the cross on the altar and crosses carried in procession by acolytes are often veiled in black or violet gauze as a sign of mourning.” (Pl.Ex. B at ¶ 6).
. The Illinois State Board of Education is the only state agency (that defendants are aware of)
.The parties took depositions of nine different school districts: Evanston Township High School — District 202, Glenview Board of Education — District 34, Winnetka Board of Education — District 203 (New Trier High School), Winnetka Board of Education — District 36, Skokie School District 68, Glenbrook High School — District 225, Deerfield Board of Education — District 109, Deerfield-Highland Park Board of Education — District 113 (Highland Park High School and Deerfield High School), Glencoe Board of Education- — District 35. Each of these districts except Glenview District 34 currently closes school at least one day of Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur. (Def. Statement of Uncontested Facts at ¶ 9).
.
See Lee
v.
Weisman,
— U.S. -, -,
. The court explained, "[i]t is of no constitutional moment that Hawaii selected a day of traditional Christian worship rather than a neutral date, for its spring holiday once it identified the need.” Id. at 776.
. As an example of the emerging secular quality of the Good Friday holiday, the court noted that "the Good Friday holiday has become a popular shopping day. in Hawaii and businesses have benefited from the three-day weekend created as a result of the holiday.” Id.
.
See American Civil Liberties Union v. City of St. Charles,
. The question of whether this practice violates the Establishment Clause is not before this court.
