Schools

Kings Park Parent Offended By Chorus's Edited Silent Night Lyrics

Parent questions district's oversight of song selections made by performing groups.

A Kings Park parent is not keeping silent or calm after being offended by aĀ school chorus's performance ofĀ the holiday carol "Silent Night" with altered lyrics.Ā 

Kevin McDonald said Kings Park school teachers removed all religious references from the lyrics of "Silent Night" to avoid offending non-Christians at the Dec. 12 fifth-grade concert held atĀ Ralph J. Osgood Intermediate School.Ā 

"Silent Night at its coreĀ is a religious song. It'sĀ a sacred, religiousĀ hymn that tells the story ofĀ Jesus'sĀ birth," McDonald said at the Dec. 17 Board of Education meeting.Ā 

Superintendent Susan Agruso and R.J.O Intermediate School principal Rudy MassimoĀ said the chorus director had pulled outĀ lines of the song with the mostĀ religious meaning, as "the chorale director thought it was an appropriate way to represent the song without offending those of other faiths."Ā 

"The non-religious words were cobbled together to create something resembling the song and something that would probably pass public scrutiny regarding the separation of church and state," McDonald said. "It should have been off limits."Ā 

Watch: Video of R.J.O.'s fifth-grade chorus performs Altered Silent Night.Ā 

AĀ YouTubeĀ video of the performance shows how the chorale director edited "Silent Night" to remove lines of religious significance, but did not replace or edit lyrics with other words.Ā Ā 

Massimo said it is not uncommonĀ for theĀ chorale director toĀ edit songs for performance in a concert, most oftenĀ for length if the selected piece is too long.Ā 

"The harmony piece of the song was something we were working with and weĀ wanted our children to experience that part of the song," Massimo said. "Moving forward, we will be more cautious of the songs thatĀ we choose."Ā 

Both Agruso and Massimo stressed that no disrespect was intended by the song's selection or changes made. The superintendent did acknowledge, however, that several community members were offended.Ā 

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"I apologize for that, it’s the last thing anybody intended. Going forward, it’s not going to happen again. They will be more cautious and cognizant of this particular issue when they select a song," Agruso said. "They meant nothing wrong. Clearly we could have done something different, and in the future we will."

McDonald suggestedĀ rather than having altered the lyrics to "Silent Night" perhaps the piece could have beenĀ instrumentally played by the band or the orchestra, leaving listeners to fill in the lyrics if they desired.Ā Ā  Ā 

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"I do believe the song should not have been sung the way it was. It wasn't done to purposefully disrespect anyone, but I believe we need to look into doing it differently," said Marie Goldstein, president of the Board of Education.Ā 

Board members said they wouldĀ have further conversations on this issue and re-examine how the district approves songs selected by its performance groups.

Parents at the Dec. 17 board meeting requested to be publicly informed of outcome of that boardĀ discussion and what, if any, changes will be made to the district'sĀ oversight of future performances.Ā Ā 

Did you attend R.J.O Intermediate School concert and have thoughts on the altered Silent Night? Should songs be altered to keep a "separation of church and state"?Ā 

Tell us in the comments below.Ā 

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