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‘Time to Pass Out Bibles Instead Of Qurans’: Chris Krok Plans Wylie ISD School Response

Dallas Express | May 17, 2026
Chris Krok To Distribute Bibles At Wylie East High School | Image by DX

Chris Krok, a radio host and podcaster, says he will join Wylie ISD parents to distribute Bibles outside Wylie East High School on May 19, months after Wylie ISD acknowledged that representatives of “Why Islam?” distributed materials on campus without required approval.

Krok announced the planned distribution in a press release, saying the group will be outside the school from 8:15 to 9 a.m. as students enter the parking lot.

“It’s time to pass out Bibles instead of Qurans at Wylie East H.S. America is a Christian nation,” Krok said in the release. “Instead of reading a ‘Shahada Card’ inside a Quran on how to pray to become a Muslim, we will pass out Bibles with instructions on how to receive Christ and become a Christian.”

Krok has also launched a GiveSendGo campaign to help pay for the Bibles.

Krok has also launched a GiveSendGo campaign to help pay for the Bibles. The campaign page shows the effort has raised $580 toward a $400 goal.

The planned event follows a February incident at Wylie East High School involving representatives of “Why Islam?,” who set up a table in a common area during lunch and distributed copies of the Quran, pamphlets on “Understanding Shariah,” and hijabs to female students, as previously reported by Texas Scorecard in an article published by The Dallas Express.

The incident drew public backlash after Marco Hunter-Lopez, president of the Wylie East High School Republican Student Club, posted videos to social media raising concerns about the group’s presence on campus.

“We typically have colleges come out. We have our clubs, have tables. We’ve never had a faith group to my understanding,” Hunter-Lopez said at the time.

Wylie ISD later told families the incident stemmed from a failure to follow district protocols.

“If proper protocols had been followed, this incident would not have occurred. We take that very seriously,” the district stated, according to the prior report.

The district said its policy bars outside organizations from distributing materials to students without prior approval from campus and district administrators. Guests may speak only with official student clubs with prior approval and may address only students with signed parent permission forms on file.

“In this case, the organization did not have permission to distribute materials, did not receive approval to speak with students outside of the club, and the club did not submit the required guest speaker request form,” the district stated.

The district characterized the incident as a procedural failure, not a dispute over religion or ideology.

“This situation is not about religion, politics, ideology, or any personal belief system. It is about a procedural breakdown,” the district said.

The February incident led some parents and community members to accuse the district of applying a double standard to Christianity and Islam. Krok’s announcement frames the May 19 Bible distribution as a direct response to the earlier campus incident.

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