Objective coverage of church-state and religious liberty developments, with extensive links to primary sources.
Saturday, June 16, 2007
Recent Scholarly Articles of Interest
Carolyn M. Evans, Religious Freedom and Religious Hatred in Democratic Societies, (Univ. of Melbourne Legal Studies Research Paper No. 236).
Carl H. Esbeck, When Accommodations for Religion Violate the Establishment Clause: Regularizing the Supreme Court's Analysis, (West Virginia Law Review, Vol. 110, No. 1, Fall 2007).
From Bepress:
Paul E. McGreal, Social Capital in Constitutional Law: The Case of Private Norm Enforcement Through Prayer at Public Occasions, (May 2007).
From SmartCILP:
Ezekial Johnson & James Wright, Are Mormons Bankrupting Utah? Evidence from the Bankruptcy Courts, 40 Suffolk University Law Review 607-639 (2007).
Heba A. Raslan, Shari'a and the Protection of Intellectual Property--the Example of Egypt, 47 IDEA 497-559 (2007).
Symposium on Pope John Paul II and the Law. Foreword by Elizabeth R. Kirk; articles by Gerald J. Beyer, Renato Raffaele Cardinal Martino, Gregory R. Beabout, Mary Catherine Hodes, Michael Lower, Christopher Tollefsen and Most Rev. Nicholas DiMarzio. 21 Notre Dame Journal of Law, Ethics & Public Policy 1-214 (2007).
MD Court Says Organist Not Excluded By Title VII "Ministerial Exception"
Judge Harrell, dissenting, argued that "Moersen's position was of a ministerial nature…. A position entailing the performance of religious music, for a church during its religious services, to a religious end cannot possibly be perceived as anything but religious."
Judge Confirms Jury's Findings Against Florida Homeless Shelter
Friday, June 15, 2007
Army Chaplain's Bible Study Guides Create Controversy
Religious Belief No Defense To Order To Restore Competency To Stand Trial
Do Public Accommodation Laws Limit Ability To Carry Out Shunning?
Tennessee AG Says Grants To Churches Violate Establishment Clause
New Commission To Study Church-State Relations In Czech Republic
2nd Circuit Allows 9-11 Detainee to Proceed With Religious Discrimination Claims
Chinese Officials Demolish Buddhist Statue At Monestary
Thursday, June 14, 2007
Justice Department Increasingly Focusing On Religious Rights Cases
Appeal Filed in 10th Circuit Over Exclusion of Sectarian Schools From Aid Program
Texas Governor Signs Student Religious Expression Law
In signing the bill, Perry said: "Education is about open-mindedness and learning from one another's thoughts and philosophies. Therefore we cannot - and should not - shield or discourage our children from expressing religious views in school. Stifling discussion in order to appease a secular-only environment will prevent students from growing both academically and personally."
Arizona School Voucher Program Upheld
IRS Asked To Investigate RI Diocese Because of Anti-Giuliani Editorial
Court Rejects Muslim Officer's Challenge To Police Uniform Requirements
Prohibiting religious symbols and attire helps to prevent any divisiveness on the basis of religion both within the force itself and when it encounters the diverse population of Philadelphia.... Police Directive 78 is designed to maintain religious neutrality, but in this case in a para-military organization for the good not only of the police officers themselves but also of the public in general. Under the circumstances, it would clearly cause the City an undue hardship if it had to allow plaintiff to wear a khimar.The court also rejected plaintiff's claim of a hostile work environment and retaliation. The Associated Press yesterday reported on the decision. [Thanks to How Appealing for posting the opinion.]
Interview With Critic of Evangelism In the Military Published
We now have about seventeen active cases going on at the Academy. Over forty-two hundred members of the U.S. military -– Marines, sailors, soldiers, airmen, veterans –- have come talk to us, and roughly 96% of them are Christians. About three-fourths would be traditional Protestants such as Presbyterians, Lutherans, Methodists, Episcopalians, Church of Christ, and Baptists. The other one-fourth are primarily Roman Catholic, with the balance being Jewish, Islamic, Buddhist, Hindu, or Wicken.
Basically you have dominionist evangelical Christians pray/preying -– on non-Evangelical Christians, telling them: You know what? You may think you’re a Christian, but you’re not actually Christian enough. And as a result, you’re going to burn eternally in the fires of hell along with the Jews.
Britain Proposes To Consolidate and Modernize Its Anti-Discrimination Laws
Bush Speaks To Southern Baptist Convention Meeting
Wednesday, June 13, 2007
Cert. Denial From April (Not Previously Reported)
Recent Prisoner Free Exercise Cases
Mobley v. Smith, 2007 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 40229 (WD MI, June 4, 2007), involved a complaint by a prisoner over the delay he experienced in receiving kosher meals after he converted to Judaism. A Michigan federal district court permitted plaintiff to continue with his free exercise claim, though it said it might dismiss it after further facts are developed. It rejected his claim that he suffered unconstitutional cruel and unusual punishment from food deprivation because he ate only fruits and vegetables in order to observe his kosher diet.
In Jeansonne v. Richland Parish Detention Center, 2007 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 40183 (WD LA, April 11, 2007), a Louisiana federal magistrate judge rejected a prisoner's free exercise claim. The prisoner had complained that officials only permitted him to practice his Wiccan religion in his residence dormitory, and not outside it, out of concern about reaction from Christian prisoners.
In Petersen v. Price, 2007 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 40499 (ND WV, June 1, 2007), a federal prisoner complained about his removal from the Bureau of Prisons kosher meal plan. A West Virginia federal Magistrate Judge recommended dismissal of claims against certain of the defendants, finding they were not sufficiently involved. He also recommended dismissal of plaintiff's RLUIPA claims, find that RLUIPA applies only to state and local governments. He found further that officials were justified in removing plaintiff from the meal plan after plaintiff purchased non-kosher food at the prison commissary. Finally he rejected plaintiff's complaint regarding non-kosher lunch bags during lock downs, and rejected plaintiff's retaliation and equal protection claims.
In Smith v. Frank, 2007 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 41243 (ED WI, June 5, 2007), a Wisconsin federal district court permitted a prisoner to proceed with his First Amendment, RLUIPA and state law claims growing out of a prison official's taking a federally protected Eagle feather from plaintiff, who is an enrolled member of a federally recognized Indian tribe.
In Thaxton v. Strode, 2007 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 41247 (WD KY, June 3, 2007), a Kentucky federal district court permitted a Jewish prisoner who was not permitted to attend Muslim worship services to proceed with a First Amendment claim. Plaintiff claims that he goes to all religious services to study God's word and to pray. Jail authorities had denied his request based on "past history of violence/hatred between [the] Muslim [and] Jewish Religion".
Oregon House Passes Workplace Religious Freedom Bill
Conversion Remains Controversial Legal and Political Topic In India
Meanwhile, the Hindu organization, Vishva Hindu Parishad, is urging the president of India to expel all foreign missionaries from the coutnry arguing that the Indian constitution only protects the right of Indian citizens to propagate religious views. The Organiser reports that a memo from VHP to President Dr APJ Abdul Kalam last month also called for a ban on foreign funds coming to missionaries in the country, confiscation of literature that insults Hindu deities, an investigation of activities of foreign missionaries, and a nation-wide law banning conversion by force, allurement or fraud.
Retirement Community Cannot Rely On Tax Exemption Of Baptist Organization
Tuesday, June 12, 2007
In Egypt, Fatwas Proliferate-- And Some Are Embarrassing
New Jersey Passes Bill Requiring Pharmacies To Fill All Prescriptions
Military Hearing Officer Rejects Testimony of Monk About Islam
Complaint Against Church For Political Meddling Dismissed In Mexico
Czech Government Will Submit Anti-Discrimination Law To Parliament
Monday, June 11, 2007
US Removes Religious Texts From Prison Chapel Libraries
Sikhs To Take French Ban On Turban In License Photo To European Court
Changes In the Offing For A NC District's Bible History Course
Egyptian Court Refuses To Disqualify Candidates For Using Religious References
VA Supreme Court Upholds Inmate's Religious Name Change Request
Drafting Committee Says Thai Monks Seeking Official Religion Should End Fast
Sunday, June 10, 2007
Recent Articles Of Interest
Chaim Saiman, Jesus' Legal Theory-A Rabbinic Interpretation, (June 2007, Villanova Law/Public Policy Research Paper No. 2007-12).
Jude Chua, What is a “Professional”? Ethics and Religion in the Sciences of the Artificial, (May 31, 2007).
Lloyd H.Mayer, Grasping Smoke: Enforcing the Ban on Political Activity By Charities, (First Amendment Law Review, Vol. 6, 2007).
From SmartCILP and elsewhere:
The Winter 2007 issue of Montana Law Review carries three articles on "Intelligent Design": David K. DeWolf, John G. West & Casey Luskin, Intelligent Design Will Survive; Peter Irons, Disaster in Dover; David K. DeWolf, John G. West & Casey Luskin, Rebuttal to Irons. (The articles are discussed at Dispatches from the Culture Wars blog.)
L. Scott Smith, From Promised Land to Tower of Babel: Religious Pluralism and the Future of the Liberal Experiment in America, 45 Brandeis Law Journal 527-572 (2007).
Cert. Petition Filed In 9th Circuit Case on Use of Library Meeting Room
PBS Church-State Documentary Questioned
Rabbi's Contract and ADA Claims Dismissed On 1st Amendment Grounds
Saturday, June 09, 2007
US President Meets Pope In Rome
While in Rome, Bush also met at the U.S. Embassy with members of the Sant Egido Community, a lay Roman Catholic organization that operates an AIDS program in ten African countries. The program is partly funded by the U.S. Listening to the group’s concerns, Bush said that he would look into making it easier for faith based groups to access US aid funds directly, instead of through foreign governments.I'll be glad to share some of the private conversation with His Holy Father. First, I'll give you an impression. I was talking to a very smart, loving man…. I was in awe, and it was a moving experience for me.
… He did express deep concern about the Christians inside Iraq, that he was concerned that the society that was evolving would not tolerate the Christian religion. And I assured him we're working hard to make sure that people lived up to the constitution, the modern constitution voted on by the people that would honor people from different walks of life and different attitudes.
… We talked about our attempts to help the people on Africa deal with HIV/AIDS and malaria and hunger. I reminded him that we made a significant commitment to that end…
And I talked to him about our attempts to feed the hungry, and I also reminded him that we've got poor people in our own neighborhood that need to be affected. He talked about immigration. He's watching the immigration debate very closely in America. And I told him I was a person who strongly supports comprehensive immigration reform; that, on the one hand, we'll enforce our law, on the other hand, we need to treat people with dignity. And we had a good discussion.…
Q The Pope has said Iraq was worrisome.
PRESIDENT BUSH: Yes, he's worrisome [sic] about the Christians inside Iraq being mistreated by the Muslim majority. He's deeply concerned about that, and we spent a lot -- spent a fair amount of time talking about it.
Congress Hears Varied Religious Views On Attacking Global Warming
Egyptian Court Upholds Right To Wear Niqab On Campus
Canadian AG Concerned That Polygamy Charges Will Raise Religious Freedom Issues
Free Exercise Challenge To Restriction On Feeding Needy Rejected
Friday, June 08, 2007
West Virginia Justice Reveals Religious Attacks Against Him In Campaign
School Will Not Appeal Religious Flier Case
District Court Rejects Challenge To Suspension of Bussing To Parochial School
Plaintiffs claimed that provisions of the South Dakota constitution prohibiting aid for religious schools violated their federal constitutional rights. The court, however, concluded that "Whether the S.D. Constitution provisions are either facially discriminatory or were adopted out of religious animus does not matter because plaintiffs cannot establish a causal link between the S.D. Constitution provisions and the School District policy."
The court found that the school district's delay in reinstituting busing once state law was amended to permit it and insurance concerns were resolved was motivated by its concern over how that action would affect pending litigation. The court went on to say: "Because School District’s continued denial of busing is rationally related to a legitimate government interest, plaintiffs’ free exercise challenge fails as a matter of law. Further, even if School District’s policy was not facially neutral, the Supreme Court’s decision in Locke v. Davey,... indicates that the denial of busing is too insignificant of a burden to constitute a free exercise violation."
Today's Sioux Falls Argus Leader reports on the decision and the reaction of both sides to the decision.
Suburban Chicago Church Loses RLUIPA Challenge In 7th Circuit
The court also rejected the claim that the church had a vested right to operate in the warehouse because the initial refusal of a permit was under a zoning ordinance that discriminated against religious institutions. Subsequently the ordinance was revised to exclude all membership organizations-- not just churches-- from industrial zones. Posner wrote: "If the 1988 ordinance violated RLUIPA, as Northbrook comes close to conceding, Petra didn't have to comply with it. But that doesn't mean that it acquired an immunity from all zoning regulation. It knew or should have known that Northbrook could redo its ordinance to comply with the "less than equal terms" provision of RLUIPA...."
Judge Refuses To Dismiss Defamation Suit Against Funeral Picketers
Muslim Correctional Officer Trainee Loses Free Exercise Claim
Bipartisan Bill In Congress Would Require Pharmacies To Fill Contraceptive Requests
Summary Judgment Denied In Preachers' Challenge To LA Town Over Protest Rights
Thursday, June 07, 2007
Religion In US Politics Fascinates Writer In India
I want [New York Mayor Michael] Bloomberg to campaign for president because it would be a political experiment, one that tests the proposition that a serious candidate for the American presidency needs to be a Christian. And not just a nominal Christian but an observant Christian. As an Indian interested in the role of religion and religious identity in politics, I’d like to know if a non-Christian like Mr Bloomberg (who is Jewish), can mount a credible campaign. For this proposition to be disproved, it isn't important that Bloomberg win: merely that he be taken seriously as a presidential candidate.
Being publicly Christian seems oddly important in American politics. Oddly important because the democracy Indians live in, despite its bloody record of sectarian intolerance and violence, routinely elects non-believing Hindus and non-Hindus to high political office.
Catholic School Head Defends Ontario's Separate Catholic System
Suit Filed Challenging Graduation Prayer In Tangipahoa, LA School
Cert. Petition Filed In Campus Traveling Preacher Case
Court Upholds California Church's Location In Shopping Center
Will A Disclaimer Avoid Establishment Clause Issues In Graduation?
Study Says Sikh Students In NY Face Harassment
Coalition Attempts To Promote Religious Diversity In Britain
Wednesday, June 06, 2007
Religiously Motivated Kidney Donation Rejected In Canada
Death Sentence Ordered In Pakistan Blasphemy Case
Study Concludes Florida's Faith-Based Correctional Program Avoids Church-State Problems
Belarus Authorities Clash With Religious Leaders Over Restrictive Law
NM Football Coach Loses Summary Judgment Motion In Discrimination Case
In Ali v. Mumme II, (D NM, June 5, 2007), the court found that issues of fact remain in the free exercise and equal protection claims by players Mu'ammar Ali, Anthony Thompson and Vincent Thompson. They claim that they were discharged from the football team because of their Muslim faith, and that Mumme had engaged in actions having a coercive effect on their religious beliefs. Today's Las Cruces Sun-News reports on the decisions. (See prior related posting.)
German Court Upholds Ban On Muslim Teachers' Wearing Headscarves
Religion An Important Part of Yesterday's Republican Candidate Debates
The debate also gave several of the candidates an opportunity to explain their views on the evolution vs. creationism debate, and gave candidate Mitt Romney a chance to respond to those who are concerned about his Mormon religious beliefs. In response to a question from Wolf Blitzer, Romney said:
Meanwhile the website Media Matters accused CNN of incorrectly reporting that Democratic candidates had not talked about their faith and values until very recently. The website says that at least some of the Democratic candidates have talked about their faith and values for years.President Kennedy some time ago said he was not a Catholic running for president, he was an American running for president. And I'm happy to be a proud member of my faith.
You know, I think it's a fair question for people to ask, what do you believe? And I think if you want to understand what I believe, you could recognize that the values that I have are the same values you'll find in faiths across this country.
I believe in God, believe in the Bible, believe Jesus Christ is my savior. I believe that God created man in his image. I believe that the freedoms of man derive from inalienable rights that were given to us by God.
And I also believe that there are some pundits out there that are hoping that I'll distance myself from my church so that that'll help me politically. And that's not going to happen.
Opinion In Lethal Injection Autopsy Case Now Available
Tuesday, June 05, 2007
Parents In Ontario To Sue Over Support For Disabled In Private Religious Schools
NY County Human Rights Commission Gets Expanded Powers
Virginia School District Encourages Intelligent Design In Classes
In response to proponents of intelligent design, Chesterfield School Board Chair Thomas J. Doland read a statement that he asked to be included along with the Memorandum regarding textbook adoptions. The statement in part says:
The School Board is cognizant that technology now allows easy access to an almost infinite number of resources facilitating learning. To suggest that we should limit our students' access to specifically approved textbooks and instructional materials would not only inhibit self-directed learning but would also ill-prepare our young people for the challenges that will face them in the competitive global market of the 21st century.
We have received much interest and concern from our citizens relating to the theory of evolution as taught in our science classes. It is the School Board's belief that this topic, along with all other topics that raise differences of thought and opinion, should receive the thorough and unrestricted study as we have just articulated. Accordingly, we direct our superintendent to charge those of our professionals who support curriculum development and implementation with the responsibility to investigate and develop processes that encompass a comprehensive approach to the teaching and learning of these topics.
Muslim Brotherhood On Politics and Religion
GP: What about the points he brings up in the book and in his comments about the MB?
Habib: Those ideas are talked about now among intellectuals in Egypt, which call for the separation of politics and religion. This came from ignorance of the nature of Islam. Islam is a whole system. It is a complete system that consists of politics, literature, economics, etc.... Therefore, you have to accept it as a whole. There is no such thing as political work separated from religion or else we become like those who are different.
South Dakota National Guard Short On Chaplains
Court Upholds Ban On Parent's Bible Reading To Kindergarteners
CNN Broadcast Features Discussion of Religion and Politics With Candidates
UPDATE: After the Sojourners broadcast, CNN's Paula Zahn interviewed candidates Christopher Dodd, Joseph Biden, Bill Richardson and Dennis Kucinich on faith and politics. Here is the full transcript. [Thanks to Melissa Rogers for the lead.]
Recent Prisoner Free Exercise Cases
In Fisher v. Virginia Department of Corrections, 2007 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 38487 (WD VA, May 25, 2007), a federal Magistrate Judge recommended denial of defendants' motion for summary judgment in an inmate's claims that his rights under the First and 14th Amendment and under RLUIPA were violated when he was refused permission to possess a "Thor's Hammer" pendant, which was central to his practice of Asatru. He alleged that inmates of other religions were permitted to possess religious medallions. (See prior related posting.)
In Blount v. Johnson, 2007 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 39146 (WD VA, May 30, 2007), a Virginia federal district court found that an inmate who was a follower of the House of Yahweh religion should have been allowed access to the Common Fare diet several months earlier than he actually was, because of his sincere religious belief that he should eat only kosher food. However, the only relief granted by the court for the First Amendment and RLUIPA violations was nominal damages, with defendant paying court costs.
In Marshall v. Frank, 2007 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 38839 (WD WI, May 24, 2007), a Wisconsin federal district court permitted an inmate to move ahead with his claim that his rights under the First Amendment and RLUIPA were violated when prison authorities prevented him from possessing religious materials other than the Bible while housed in the prison's segregation unit.
Monday, June 04, 2007
Civil Rights Commission Focuses on Blaine Amendments and School Choice
Opposing school vouchers and supporting policies behind Blaine Amendments were Ellen Johnson, president of the American Atheists and Hollyn Hollman, general counsel of the Baptist Joint Committee for Religious Liberty. Hollman said that Blaine Amendments protect religious institutions from government interference.
Constitution Drafters In Thailand Reject Call For Official Religion
Kiev Mayor Trying To End Distribution of Antisemitic Literature
Kentucky Legislators Still Want Return of 10 Commandments To Capitol
Sunday, June 03, 2007
Column Complains About Religious Actions By Malta's Leaders
AU Complains To IRS About Religious Group's Online Opposition To Romney
UPDATE: On Thursday, the AP reported that Keller rejected AU's charges, saying: ""I have never told anybody who to vote for or who not to vote for - ever. I have every right to speak on matters of life and culture, including political issues, and to educate people on the spiritual implications of those issues."
Iowa Ends State Funding For Faith-Based Prison Program
Recent Articles Of Interest
Yossi Nehushtan, Conscientious Exemptions: How They Should Be Granted and By Whom, (April 2007).
Michael A. Helfand, When Religious Practices Become Legal Obligations: Extending the Foreign Compulsion Defense, (Journal of Law and Religion, Vol. 23, 2008).
From SmartCILP:
Book review colloquy on Religious Freedom and the Constitution, by Christopher L. Eisgruber and Lawrence G. Sager. Articles by Thomas C. Berg, Kent Greenawalt, Ira C. Lupu and Robert W. Tuttle; response by Christopher L. Eisgruber and Lawrence G. Sager, 85 Texas Law Review 1185-1287 (2007).
Company Must Pay Damages To Fired Muslim Employee
Spokane Diocese Exits Bankruptcy
En Banc Review Sought In 9th Circuit's Snowbowl Development Decision
Saturday, June 02, 2007
IRS Issues Guidance and Report On Church Political Activity
The IRS has also issued a report on its 2006 Political Compliance Initiative.
Christian Area In Indonesia Wants Bible-Based Law
En Banc Review Sought In 9th Circuit's Snowbowl Development Decision
Wall Street Journal Profiles Politically Powerful Iranian Shrine
The shrine has for centuries intermingled faith and money, collecting donations of cash, land, jewelry and works of art from the devout. Today, it is not only Iran's most sacred religious site but also, by some reckonings, the Islamic republic's biggest and richest business empire…. The dual role … helps explain how the power of Iran's aging clerical elite endures, nearly three decades after the 1979 Islamic Revolution.
The Imam Reza Shrine is part of a cluster of bonyads, nominally charitable foundations with huge holdings…. They publish no accounts and, in most cases, answer only to Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. This status gives bonyads an independent authority outside Iran's formal state bureaucracy and checks the power of elected officials….
Challenge To Closing of NY Catholic Church Rejected
Friday, June 01, 2007
Text of Lina Joy Dissent Available
Surgeon General Nominee Criticized For Votes On Church Council
IRS Questions Political Activities of Wichita Church
U.S. Magistrate Is New Head of Catholic Bishops' Review Board
In Baghdad, Islamists Impose Dress Code and Taxes On Non-Muslims
The Journal also reports that last month in Baghdad, al-Qaeda moved into the predominantly Assyrian Dora neighborhood and demanded payment of the jizya, the tax that the Quran says all Christians and Jews must pay. Those who did not pay were told to give a daughter or sister in marriage to a Muslim.