Write an article based on this summary:

Get a "letter" written by your legal counsel to protest what is apparent public, "religious discrimination": Consider consulting attorneys, and, perhaps, joining and supporting others through "Liberty Counsel" -- or other organization(s) -- about your troublesome public religious liberty issues. Take "legal action", with your attorneys -- such as a lawsuit, if you think religious discrimination has occurred against your family, when a letter does not gain a reversal. See what The Counsel says in this video on "religious liberty" that schools that had refused students to have student organized religious clubs, but were persuaded by The Counsel to allow students to have "Good News Clubs" and "Child Evangelism Fellowship" (CEF) by The Counsel's letters, or lawsuit, sometimes needed. Clarify the ideas of "separation of church and state" legally in your case and others:
You may get a reversal from the offending body of government. The Counsel states its main goal is to: "Educate both its membership and public officials about its view on the role of religion in public life", and "influence policy" on public and private religious liberty at all levels. The Counsel has been "providing pro bono (FREE) assistance and representation on these and related topics. With offices in Florida, Virginia, Texas, Washington, D.C., and Jerusalem, Israel, Liberty Counsel has hundreds of advocates around the world."  The Counsel was founded by Mathew D. Staver, Attorney at Law, Dean of Liberty University Law School a Private, Accredited American Bar Association (ABA) School of Law, at a Baptist church affiliated school.  Attorney Staver began the legal ministry with his wife, Anita, in 1989 and currently serves as its Chairman (2012). Anita L. Staver, his wife, served as the original President of Liberty Counsel. One of The Counsel's better well known cases was Wigg v. Sioux Falls School District 49-6 -- the 8th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that school Bible study classes on campus in after school hours does not violate the First Amendment's Establishment Clause of the 1st Amendment, as it constitutes private free-speech. Matt Barber and Deryl Edwards explain why Liberty Counsel filed a lawsuit against Seaside Public Library over the Library's unconstitutional denial of access against religious meetings! Many cases are filed by the ACLU and others as secular lawsuits involving prohibiting or unnecessarily restraining religious exercise: Liberty Counsel has an "over 92% judicial win rate". Santa Rosa County in Florida proved that two Liberty Counsel attorneys could take-on eight ACLU attorneys -- winning the settlement! "prohibiting free exercise of religion" is "unconstitutional", normally (but there are some restrictions on religious organizations activities, such as sometimes public health, family law, child welfare, fraud and criminal issues and misunderstandings can be involved and may or not be able to be upheld) under The 1st Amendment, civil and criminal statutes and codes, and rulings of lower courts and the U.S. Supreme Court.