Objective coverage of church-state and religious liberty developments, with extensive links to primary sources.
Friday, September 11, 2009
Chabad Group Sues Connecticut Town Over Zoning Refusal
Yesterday's Litchfield County (CT) Times reports that a RLUIPA lawsuit was filed in federal district court in Connecticut on Wednesday by Chabad Lubavitch of Litchfield County and its rabbi, Joseph Eisenbach, challenging the refusal by the town of Litchfield to allow Chabad to restore and add onto a Victorian house on the edge of the town's Historic District. Chabad wants to use the building as a synagogue, community center and classrooms. The proposed 21,000 square foot renovation would also contain living quarters for the rabbi, his family and guests, a mikveh, kitchens, offices and a swimming pool. (See prior posting.) The Historic District Commission says the size of the building would have overwhelmed the town's central historic district. But the lawsuit says that the zoning denial was motivated in large part by anti-Hasidic animus as reflected in a number of public statements by officials. The Hartford Courant says: "The lawsuit raises the specter of one of the most scenic villages in this wealthy state being accused of using its strict architectural standards to help it violate a group's right to practice its religion."