See You at the Pole (SYATP) is an annual gathering of thousands of Christian students at school flag poles, churches, and the Internet for the purposes of worship and prayer. The event officially began on September 12, 1990 in Burleson, Texas, United States, when a group of teenagers gathered to pray for several schools.
Background and growth
In April 1990, a group of teenagers part of a Christian youth group retreat drove to several schools around Burleson, Texas, a suburb of Fort Worth, to pray for spiritual awakening in schools. The event was commented on soon afterward at a Baptist General Convention of Texas, and leaders in youth ministry decided to expand the event. At the first official event, held on September 12 that year, over 45,000 students met in four US states, and the movement quickly spread across the country. In 1991, 800,000 to one million students participated.
Historian Benjamin Young has linked the movement's background to the previous move away from school prayer toward the Equal Access Act allowing equal access for extracurricular student-led clubs, and toward "a more nebulous standard condoning, even celebrating, 'student-led, student-initiated' religious expression." The related spiritual mapping had begun to spread several years prior in Cindy Jacobs' Charismatic circles in the Dallas–Fort Worth area, one of the first regions where the concepts took hold before spreading more widely in Evangelicalism. Overlapping was a local school superintendent who promoted school prayer, to combat societal ills, at the same conferences. Young has described the spiritual mapping movement as "[tilling] fertile soil for SYATP".
The organization advocating and guiding student participation in SYATP events insists that they be exclusively student-initiated and led without official endorsement or interference, according to rights affirmed by the Tinker v. Des Moines Independent Community School District decision of the U.S. Supreme Court—as well as a 1995 Clinton administration assignment of the President's Secretary of Education for legalization of particular school religious activities as long as they passed constitutional guidelines. The American Civil Liberties Union also approves of student-led SYATP events held before or after school, provided the school neither encourages nor discourages participation.
Pastors, teachers, and other adults are often involved; critics say that SYATP events often are only nominally student-led. Young notes the National Network of Youth Ministries's role in coordinating the event.
In the case of Doe v. Wilson County School System (M.D. Tenn. 2006, pending), the ACLU alleged that a parent group promoted the SYATP event and a National Day of Prayer with support from the school. Support for SYATP was one of several religious endorsements alleged in the case, along with sing-along prayers, hymns, and a Nativity play.
See You at the Pole rallies
Rallies, often called Saw You at the Pole or See You after the Pole, usually take place the evening of SYATP. These rallies are sponsored by local churches or local youth ministry networks and generally include one or more of the following elements: contemporary Christian music concert, worship, testimonies, drama, and/or a speaker. A shooting took place at one such event at Wedgwood Baptist Church in Fort Worth, Texas, in 1999, in which seven people were killed.
