The National Center for Law & Policy

Lilly Fowler 7-02-2013
Photo courtesy Kravchenko Marina/Shutterstock.com.

A girl standing in a yoga pose. Photo courtesy Kravchenko Marina/Shutterstock.com.

A California judge ruled Monday that the teaching of yoga in public schools does not establish a government interest in religion.

The decision came after parents sued the Encinitas Union School District to stop yoga classes introduced to elementary schoolchildren in the upscale suburb just north of San Diego.

In his opinion, San Diego Superior Court Judge John Meyer explained that although yoga is rooted in religion, it has a legitimate secular purpose in the district’s physical education program. He also said the practice, contrary to parents’ complaints, does not advance or inhibit religion.