JTA reports that at the Senate Judiciary Committee hearings yesterday on the Supreme Court nomination of Elena Kagan, the nominee referenced her religion in two unusual contexts. Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) questioned Kagan on remarks she made at Harvard Law School welcoming Israeli Supreme Court Judge Aharon Barak in which she called the activist jurist her "judicial hero." (See prior posting.) Responding to Grassley's concerns, Kagan said that her admiration does not mean she wants to adopt Barak's views in the United States. Instead, she said, she admired his role in creating an independent judiciary for Israel and assuring that it "would become a very strong rule of law nation." Then she added: "As you know, I don't think it's a secret I am Jewish. The State of Israel has meant a lot to me and my family. And – and I admire Justice Barak for what he's done for the State of Israel and ensuring an independent judiciary."
At another point in the hearing, Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) began to question Kagan about terrorism issues, focusing on the arrest in Detroit last Christmas Day of an attempted airline bomber. Graham asked: "Where were you on Christmas Day?" Kagan responded humorously: "Like all Jews, I was probably at a Chinese restaurant."
Don Byrd is live blogging from the hearings on church-state issues that arise.