❓WHAT HAPPENED: Parents spotted Islamic Ramadan decorations on Go Texan Day, in an elementary school that supposedly enforces a ban on religious displays.
👤WHO WAS INVOLVED: Moms for Liberty, Spring Branch ISD, and Bunker Hill Elementary School.
📍WHEN & WHERE: March 2026, at Bunker Hill Elementary School in Houston.
💬KEY QUOTE: “This is in a school district that does NOT allow (per board policy) religious symbols to be displayed, yet somehow these decorations were approved,” – Moms for Liberty.
🎯IMPACT: The display has been removed following online backlash.
Parents spotted an Islamic Ramadan display at Bunker Hill Elementary School in Houston, Texas, on Go Texan Day, despite the district’s policy on political and religious neutrality. The display included signage reading “Ramadan Mubarak” and Islamic symbols such as crescent moons and stars.
“‘Ramadan’ decor was set up in the lobby of an elementary school in Houston TX by a PTA ‘Cultural Committee.’ This is in a school district that does NOT allow (per board policy) religious symbols to be displayed, yet somehow these decorations were approved,” the Moms for Liberty, Harris County, Texas, chapter wrote in a post on X (formerly Twitter). “On Friday in Houston, it was ‘Go Texan Day’…a day where kids across the city celebrate their TX Pride to kick off rodeo season. Parents are often invited to come to the school to watch their kids participate in square dancing and line dancing. Imagine walking into the school for ‘Go Texan Day,’ and this is the decor that greets you,” the group added.
“Ramadan” decor was set up in the lobby of an elementary school in Houston TX by a PTA “Cultural Committee”. This is in a school district that does NOT allow (per board policy) religious symbols to be displayed, yet somehow these decorations were approved.
On Friday in… pic.twitter.com/yogPNgpbSu
— Moms for Liberty-Harris County Texas (@M4LHarris) February 28, 2026
The display was removed on Monday “because the display was religious in nature,” according to a spokesman for the school district.
The growth of Islam and attempts to enforce Sharia law in Texas have sparked significant discussion in recent years. The state’s growing Muslim population has attempted to assert itself both politically and culturally, with projects like EPIC City, a proposed residential development near Dallas, designed exclusively for adherents of Islam. Earlier this month, the Trump administration launched an investigation into the EPIC City project, joining a state probe led by Attorney General Ken Paxton, seeking to determine whether the Islamic group’s land development project has violated federal and state laws, including the Fair Housing Act.
The National Pulse reported last March that the Tablighi Jamaat—a global Islamic missionary network that intelligence agencies contend acts as a potential entry point for jihadis—had established its new headquarters in Garland, Texas. The network, also known as the ‘Army of Darkness,’ has set up operations inside the Masjid Yaseen mosque, which now serves as its American nerve center, following its relocation from Louisiana.
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