WASHINGTON, D.C. – The Obama administration is cracking down on religious discrimination in public schools with a new website and other resources aimed at protecting Muslims and other minorities.

“Students of all religions should feel safe, welcome and valued in our nation’s schools,” Assistant Secretary for Civil Rights Catherine E. Lhamon said in a press release. “We will continue to work with schools and communities to stop discrimination and harassment so that all students have an equal opportunity to participate in school no matter who they are, where they come from or which faith, if any, they subscribe to.”

MORE NEWS: Know These Before Moving From Cyprus To The UK

The initiative comes with a new website aimed at informing school officials, parents, students, teachers and others about federal laws protecting students against religious discrimination, as well as an updated online complaint form to report perceived discrimination to the federal government.

The website provides policy guidance, resources from the Office of Civil Rights, examples of case resolutions and other resources focused entirely on discrimination against blacks, Jews, refugees and other minorities, but does not address ongoing discrimination against Christian students that continues to plague public schools.

The vast majority of the materials focus on discrimination against Muslim and Jewish students.

“The department’s move comes at a crucial time, as the country grapples with disconcerting levels of anti-Muslim sentiment,” according to The Huffington Post, which seemingly places the blame on Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump rather than on the Muslim terrorists attacking Americans.

The news site reports:

In the wake of terror attacks carried out by self-declared Muslims in Paris and San Bernardino, California last year, U.S.-based nonprofit group Crisis Text Line saw a major uptick in Muslims reaching out for help. The number of users ― many of them teenagers ― who referenced being Muslim and experiencing bullying and harassment increased by 6.6 times shortly after the Paris attacks in November 2015, the group’s director of communications told CNN.

Muslim students and those of other targeted faiths and ethnicities aren’t protected from such harassment at school. In a 2014 survey, the California chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relationships found that 55 percent of Muslim students surveyed reported experiencing bullying based on their religious identity while at school.

One in five students said they had experienced discrimination by a school staff member.

Many advocates and educators blame political rhetoric in part for what they see as a rise in hostility toward Muslim students and those perceived to be Muslim. In an informal survey of 2,000 K-12 teachers published in April, the Southern Poverty Law Center found that more than one-third of the teachers had observed an increase in anti-Muslim or anti-immigrant sentiment in their schools during this election cycle.

One teacher reported to SPLC that they overheard a fifth-grader tell a Muslim student “that he was supporting Donald Trump because he was going to kill all of the Muslims if he became president!”

[xyz-ihs snippet=”NEW-In-Article-Rev-Content-Widget”]

MORE NEWS: How to prepare for face-to-face classes

Neither the Post nor Obama’s Office of Civil Rights, however, have addressed religious discrimination against Christian students in public schools brought on by atheist groups like the Freedom From Religion Foundation, which works to eradicate all references of religion from public life.

In O’Donnell, Texas last week, FFRF forced school officials to cover a student mural with the Ten Commandments by threatening to sue the school district. It was a similar deal in Ocean Springs, Mississippi, where the FFRF threatened to sue over a voluntary back-to-school Christian prayer service, EAGnews reports.

FFRF and others of a similar ilk have also worked to end school field trips, voluntary religious lunch services, eradicate creationism in classrooms, ban students from sharing Bible verses, and devise other plots to restrict religious freedom for Christians.

The problem persists in higher education, as well.

Most recently, Madison Area Technical College officials in Wisconsin launched an investigation of professor Hiep Van Dong at the behest of FFRF for discussing Christianity with students, EAGnews reports.

Students’ faith in Christianity is under attack on the daily basis in public schools, from groups like FFRF and administrators wary of costly litigation, but the issue is not even mentioned in Obama’s push to eliminate religious discrimination in public schools.