Objective coverage of church-state and religious liberty developments, with extensive links to primary sources.
Thursday, May 22, 2008
US Warns Maldives About Proposal To Limit Citizenship To Muslims
Wednesday, May 21, 2008
Residents of Israeli Town Burn Bibles Distributed To Them By Missionaries
UPDATE: A report Thursday by the Christian Post Reporter gives more details on the incident and indicates that Deputy Mayor Uzi Aharon apologized for the burnings which he said were carried out by yeshiva students that he had initially organized to collect, largely from Ethopian Jews, packages given to them by Messianics.
Religious Discrimination Charged In Pentagon's Investigation of Spy Claims
Maryland Church Sues Over Utility Denial
New Developments In Westboro Baptist Church Litigation
MN Court Rejects Establishment Clause Challenge To Clergy Sexual Conduct Law
Tennessee Legislature Authorizes Courses On Bible and Its Influence
Wiley Drake's Church Cleared of IRS Campaign Violations
Ugandan University Bars Muslim Women From Wearing Head Coverings In Exams
British Registrar's Religious Discrimination Suit Heard By Tribunal
Tuesday, May 20, 2008
Canada's High Court To Hear Case On Mature Minor's Relgious Rights
Whether provisions of The Child and Family Services Act, C.C.S.M. c. C80 are unconstitutional on the basis that they infringe child’s rights under ss. 2(a), 7 and 15(1) of the Charter - If so, whether infringement is justified as a reasonable limit - Should capacity or an arbitrary legislated age determine a capable patient’s Charter right to make medical treatment decisions - Does s. 1 of the Charter require the state to lead compelling evidence justifying arbitrary age legislation that overrides a capable patient’s medical treatment decisions.UPDATE: The Canadian Press reports on Tuesday's oral arguments in which the parties sparred over the constitutionality of Manitoba's law.
New York Court Refuses Comity to Israeli Divorce Based On US Religious Decree
If this court were to sanction the utilization of a "Get" to circumvent the constitutional requirement that only the Supreme Court can grant a civil divorce, then a party who obtains a "Get" in New York could register it in a foreign jurisdiction and potentially, later on, rely on the"Get" to obtain a civil divorce in New York thereby rendering New York Stae's [sic.] Constitutional scheme as to a civil divorce ineffectual (New York State Constitution, Article 1 Section 9 . . . nor shall any divorce be granted otherwise by judicial proceedings). It would have the practical affect [sic.] of amending the Domestic Relations Law section 170 to provide a new grounds for divorce.Today's New York Law Journal reports on the decision.
Hearings Begin In FLDS Custody Cases; Vague Service Plans Protested
UPDATE: Child welfare officials are banning any mention of FLDS leader Warren Jeffs to the children in state custody. Tuesday's Houston Chronicle reports that family members visiting children in foster care may not mention Jeffs, and children may not have copies of the Book of Mormon if they have Jeffs picture or signature in them.
Danish Government Will Ban Judges From Wearing Religious Garb or Symbols
Survey Finds 16% of High School Biology Teachers Believe In Creationism
Cultural Identity Charter School Ordered To Make Two Changes In Operations
The Department found that the school's 30-minute Friday prayer service held on school premises cut excessively into required instructional time. Permitting teachers to pray along with students at the service was also improper governmental endorsement of religion. Finally the Department said that busing schedules need to be changed. The 30% of the students who do not participate in after-school activities must be offered transportation immediately after classes end. The most popular after-school session is a religious studies course run by the Muslim American Society. The school's executive director told the Star Tribune that most significant was the fact that the state found no problems with the school's curriculum.
Monday, May 19, 2008
US Serviceman In Iraq Infuriates Muslims By Using Quran For Target Practice
UPDATE: CNN reported on Tuesday that Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki's office has said that President Bush has apologized for the soldier's actions. However White House National Security Council spokesman Gordon Johndroe said that Bush, during his regularly scheduled teleconference with al-Maliki, expressed "deep concern" but stopped short of apologizing.
Proposed Religion Classes Stir Controversy In Bosnia-Herzegovina
Franklin Graham Criticizes "Missionary-Invasion" Plans For Olympics
Bush Tells Mid East Leaders That Democracy Does Not Threaten Islam
There are people who claim that democracy is incompatible with Islam. But the truth is that democracies, by definition, make a place for people of religious belief. America is ... one of the world's leading democracies, and we're also one of the most religious nations in the world. More than three-quarters of our citizens believe in a higher power. Millions worship every week and pray every day. And they do so without fear of reprisal from the state. In our democracy, we would never punish a person for owning a Koran. We would never issue a death sentence to someone for converting to Islam. Democracy does not threaten Islam or any religion. Democracy is the only system of government that guarantees their protection.
Recent Scholarly Articles and New Book of Interest
- Teresa Stanton Collett, Advancing the Culture of Life Through Faithful Citizenship, (Journal of Religion and Society, 2008).
- Akiva Shapiro, Should the Lower Courts Save Taxpayer Standing? Interpreting Hein v. Freedom from Religion Foundation Narrowly Through the Lens of Judicial Spending,(Journal of Appellate Practice and Process, Vol. 10, No. 2, 2009).
- Scott A. Taylor, Spirituality and Academic Performance at a Catholic Law School: An Empirical Study, (California Western Law Review, Vol. 45, 2008).
- Erwin Chemerinsky, Why Church and State Should Be Separate, 49 William & Mary Law Review 2193 (2008).
- Gerard V. Bradley, Religion at a Public University, 49 William & Mary Law Review 2218 (2008).
New Book:
Jeff Sharlet, The Family: The Secret Fundamentalism at the Heart of American Power, (HarperCollins, May 2008).
Fired Engineer Sues-- Claims Religious Discrimination Over Christian Beliefs
Bahrain Prohibits Political Activities At Mosques
Sunday, May 18, 2008
FLDS Parents Served By Formal Publication Notice
Dutch Cartoonist Arrested For Publishing Cartoons Insulting To Mulsims
Court Rejects Challenge To Hawaii's Limits On Who Can Perform Marriages
The requirement has the secular purpose of maintaining the integrity of marriage records.... Judicial officers and religious leaders are individuals that the State has recognized in the past and can reasonably expect will ensure, in the future, the recording of essential information.The court also rejected plaintiff's free speech and equal protection challenges, holding that there is no fundamental right to be entitled to solemnize marriages.
Suit Threatened Over Wisconsin Village Land Sale To Preserve Cross
California Church Wins RLUIPA Claim Over Use Permit Process
the mandatory CUP process established by Defendants and applied to Grace Church – with the result that Plaintiff received a CUP of only half the length Plaintiff requested, and has no reasonable expectation that Defendants will approve any extension – constituted a substantial burden on Grace Church’s exercise of religion. At various levels of Defendants’ mandatory CUP process, Grace Church experienced outright hostility to its application, decision-making that is seemingly arbitrary or pretextual, and ignorance regarding the requirements of controlling federal law regarding the application of land use laws to religious institutions.Alliance Defense Fund last week issued a release on the decision and World Net Daily reported on the decision on Friday. (See prior related posting.)
... The facts of this case belie Defendants’ claim that they have a "compelling interest" in preserving industrial lands in the industrial park where Grace Church has secured its property.
Reactions To California Marriage Decision From Chief Justice and Religious Groups
Saturday, May 17, 2008
Uganda's Parliament Passes Education Bill Calling For Elective Courses In Religion
Cert. Petition Filed In Oregon Religious Circumcision Case
Friday, May 16, 2008
10th Circuit Hears Oral Arguments In College Aid Case
Czech President Vetoes Anti-Discrimination Law
Arizona Appellate Court Strikes Down School Voucher Programs
Coast Guard Agrees To Vaccine Exemption, Ending Lawsuit
Kosher Meat Shortage Possible After Immigration Raids On Largest Producer
Thursday, May 15, 2008
California Supreme Court Rejects Gay Marriage Ban, But No Impact On Religious Doctrines
In reaching its decision on gay marriage, the court held that "sexual orientation [is] a characteristic that we conclude represents — like gender, race, and religion —a constitutionally suspect basis upon which to impose differential treatment...." In response to the argument that sexual orientation should not trigger strict scrutiny because it is not an "immutable" characteristic, the majority said that: "California cases establish that a person’s religion is a suspect classification for equal protection purposes ... and one’s religion, of course, is not immutable but is a matter over which an individual has control." Today's Los Angeles Times reports on the decision.
Here are links to the briefs and recordings of the oral arguments in the case.
University Fires Human Resources VP For Anti-Gay Statements
The University also fired Dixon after she refused the alternative of a demotion and pay cut. (Toledo Free Press.) Today's Toledo Blade reports that Dixon now says that her First Amendment free speech and free exercise of religion rights were infringed by the University's actions. She says she had a divine mandate to write the column and that she was speaking as a private citizen. However a University spokesman said that Dixon's public expressions called into question her ability to perform in her human resources position.
Muslim Serviceman May Sue Army Over Its Autopsy of Infant
New Developments In FLDS Child Custody Cases
Meanwhile, according to today's Dallas Morning News, Texas Child Protective Services has drafted guidelines for "service plans" that parents will need to develop in order to regain custody of their children. CPS has set out 10 goals and 14 tasks that should be included. The guidelines question any form of communal living, require residential buildings to be open for unannounced visits by CPS workers, and mandate that the names of everyone in the home must be given to CPS. The guidelines also call for job training, schooling for children and knowing how to access community resources.
Split 9th Circuit Rejects En Banc Review In Sunrise Rock Cross Case
After the panel refused to grant a rehearing, the full court also refused to grant an en banc rehearing. However, in a long opinion, five judges dissented from the denial en banc review. The dissent argues that there is no evidence that the government will maintain or support the Sunrise Rock Cross after its transfer, and says that the VFW should not be required to sacrifice its private rights in the Sunrise Rock land in order to cure an Establishment Clause violation by the government. [Thanks to How Appealing for the lead.][Corrected].
New York Town Transfers Enforcement of Building Codes Against Amish to State
Court Concludes Paratrooper Is Entitled To Conscientious Objector Status
Much is made of the fact that Barnes did not attend church services in Iraq. While [this] ... might hold sway if there were other facts showing a sudden and convenient getting of religion, surely the Army agrees that it is not its province to suggest there is a proper way to be a Christian, or for that matter, to lay claim to or practice any other form of religion....Instead of remanding the case to the Army's Conscientious Objector Review Board, the court concluded that Barnes' petition for habeas corpus and mandamus should be granted and the Army should be ordered to grant Barnes an honorable discharge. The Army has until tomorrow to appeal the magistrate's findings. Yesterday's London Guardian reports on the decision.
The fact that Barnes’ thought processes may not have been "mature" is of no moment. One need not be a St. Augustine or a St. Thomas Aquinas to qualify as CO, indeed conscientious objection has no necessary relation to intellectual sophistication....
The evidence is overwhelming that Barnes – a motivated infantryman –is a person who takes his religious beliefs seriously, and there is strong evidence that his decision was motivated by those beliefs.... True, the timing of Barnes’ decision is suspect. But that alone cannot be the basis for denying his application....
UPDATE: the May 24 Anchorage Daily News reports that the Army has appealed the magistrate's decision to federal district Judge John Sedwick.
Massachusetts Agrees That Non-Jewish Prisoner Gets Kosher Diet
No Summary Judgment In Colorado Episcopal Church Property Dispute
Website Says Grassley's Investigation of Televangelists Reflects Religious Bias
Wednesday, May 14, 2008
Court Dismisses Free Exercise Challenge To Civil Commitment After Marijuana Charge
Texas Welfare Workers Criticized For Treatment of FLDS Children
Preachers' Suit Against Mississippi City Settled
Muslim Woman's Suit Against Judge Dismissed On Procedural Grounds
In Muhammad v. Paruk, (ED MI, May 12, 2008), the federal court relied primarily on language in the Declaratory Judgment Act giving it discretion on whether or not to issue a declaratory judgment. The court said:
[I]f Paruk has a valid, neutral and generally applicable policy of requiring witnesses to keep their faces visible while giving testimony, that policy would not violate Muhammad’s right to free exercise of her religion. Determining if Paruk has such a policy and, if he does, deciding whether it is valid, neutral and generally applicable would necessitate a detailed examination of how Paruk manages his court room as a state court judge. Conducting this type of review as a federal judge would undoubtably increase friction in the relationship between our state and federal courts.... [R]espect for the relationship between our state and federal courts weighs heavily against exercising jurisdiction over Muhammad’s declaratory judgment action for violation of her right to free exercise of her religion....The AP yesterday reported on the decision. [Thanks to How Appealing for posting the opinion.]
To establish a ... denial of access to the courts claim... could require me to determine whether Muhammad’s state court claim was "non-frivolous" ... and to review
whether Judge Paruk’s actions frustrated Muhammad’s litigation. This kind of review also threatens to increase the tension between our state and federal courts and weighs against exercising jurisdiction over Muhammad’s declaratory judgment action for denial of access to the courts.
Indian Supreme Court Rejects Challenge To French Action Against Sikhs
Tuesday, May 13, 2008
9th Circuit Upholds School Dress Policy Against Speech and Religion Challenges
Judge Thomas dissented arguing that the regulation was not viewpoint neutral since it permitted T-shirts with slogans supporting the school. He also argued that the government's purpose in imposing the uniform rule was not substantial enough to outweigh students' speech rights. Today's Las Vegas Review Journal reports on the decision.
Virginia County Will Offer Bible In History Course
Cert Denied In O'Hare Expansion Challenge By Church
Group Charges SFO Targets Sikhs For Turban Searches
Monday, May 12, 2008
Archbishop Tells Kansas Governor Not To Take Communion
Since becoming archbishop, I have met with Governor Sebelius several times over many months to discuss with her the grave spiritual and moral consequences of her public actions by which she has cooperated in the procurement of abortions performed in Kansas.... I wrote the governor last August requesting that she refrain from presenting herself for reception of the Eucharist until she had acknowledged the error of her past positions, made a worthy sacramental confession and taken the necessary steps for amendment of her life which would include a public repudiation of her previous efforts and actions in support of laws and policies sanctioning abortion.
Recently, it came to my attention that the governor had received holy Communion at one of our parishes. I have written to her again, asking her to respect my previous request and not require from me any additional pastoral actions.
Louisiana School Has Seniors Vote On Graduation Prayer
Algerian Court Fines Christian Convert For Carrying Unauthorized Religious Books
Texas Bigamy Prosecution Wll Test Strengthened Law
Recent Articles and Book of Interest
- Donald R. Davis, Maxims & Precedent in Classical Hindu Law, (Indologica Taurinensia, Vol. 33, pp. 33-55, 2007).
- Eric G. Andersen, Protecting Religious Liberty Through the Establishment Clause: The Case of the United Effort Plan Trust Litigation, (U Iowa Legal Studies Research Paper No. 08-11, May 8, 2008).
- Craig A. Stern & Gregory M. Jones, The Coherence of Natural Inalienable Rights, (2008).
- Haider Ala Hamoudi, Baghdad Booksellers, Basra Carpet Merchants, and the Law of God and Man: Legal Pluralism and the Contemporary Muslim Experience, (U. of Pittsburgh Legal Studies Research Paper No. 2008-14, May 5, 2008).
From SmartCILP:
- Steven D. Smith, Our Agnostic Constitution, 83 New York University Law Review 120-166 (2008).
- Symposium on Religion, Religious Pluralism, and the Rule of Law. Contents: Introduction by Mark C. Modak-Truran; articles by Larry Cata Backer, Scott C. Idleman, Robin W. Lovin, Michael Novak, Jana Novak, Steven D. Smith and Mark C. Modak-Truran. 27 Missippi College Law Review 1-233 (2007-2008).
Journal of Church & State, Vol 50, No. 1, Winter 2008, has recently been published.
Recent Book:
- Alan Brownstein, Establishment of Religion Clause, (Prometheus Books, 1st American Paperback Ed. Dec. 31, 2007).
Frankenmuth Resident Gives Up On Challenge To Cross On City Shield
Sri Lankan Buddhists Protest Discriminatory Electric Rates For Temples
Sunday, May 11, 2008
FLDS Advocate Asks Bush To Intercede
We appeal to you, as President of the United States of America and Leader of the Free World, to intercede in behalf of an American community which has been invaded and devastated by an armed militant force. Mr. President, it does not require a foreign country to commit terrorist acts on American soil. Terrorist acts can be committed by federal, local, and private entities that are operating under the guise of “protecting the public.”Near the end of his 10-page letter, Jessop says:
It has been customary for a President to visit the site of a disaster of this magnitude where so many innocent people are involved.... We personally invite you, First Lady Laura Bush, and members of your staff to visit the YFZ community and witness firsthand the site of these gross violations of human rights that have occurred in your peaceful neighboring west-Texas community. Reunite these children with their loving parents, and return families to their homes!Deseret News says the letter was hand delivered to President Bush's staff yesterday near the Bush ranch in Texas where the President was attending the wedding of his daughter Jenna.
We call upon you to ... hold accountable those who perpetrated these acts of terror and now are determined to save the state from embarrassment by selectively prosecuting members of the FLDS faith.
1990's Actions By Castro Helped Revive Cuban Jewish Community
Recent Prisoner Free Exercise Litigation
In Blast v. Fischer, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 36318, (WD NY, May 5, 2008), a New York federal magistrate judge refused plaintiff prisoner's request to appoint an expert witness to testify in his RLUIPA case about the Santeria religion and Western Cultural African Yoruba. The court said that the main issue is the sincerity of plaintiff's beliefs, not the objective importance of a particular practice within his faith system.
In El-Tabech v. Clarke, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 36793, (D NE, May 5, 2008), a Nebraska federal district court awarded $196,605 in attorneys' fees and $8,380 in costs against defendants in a lawsuit in which a Muslim prisoner won his claim to receive a kosher diet, and his request that the prayer schedule be posted so that guards are aware of it. In awarding the fees, the court said: "Significant and complicated constitutional issues and statutory issues were adjudicated and El-Tabech vindicated not only his own rights, but those of similarly situated prisoners." (See prior related posting.)
In Lakhumna v. Friel, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 37859, (D UT, May 8, 2008), a Utah federal district judge permitted a prisoner to proceed against most of his named defendants in a lawsuit claiming that authorities failed to accommodate his Hindu dietary requirements, and that Hindu inmates are not given the same access to the prison chapel as are others.
Korean Court Rejcts Damage Claim By Expelled High Schooler
Romney Addresses Importance of Religious Freedom To Non-Believers
upon reflection, I realized that while I could defend their absence from my address, I had missed an opportunity…an opportunity to clearly assert the following: non-believers have just as great a stake as believers in defending religious liberty.Romney also strongly defended his December statement that "freedom requires religion." Saturday's Salt Lake Tribune reports on the Becket fund speech.
If a society takes it upon itself to prescribe and proscribe certain streams of belief – to prohibit certain less-favored strains of conscience – it may be the non-believer who is among the first to be condemned. A coercive monopoly of belief threatens everyone, whether we are talking about those who search the philosophies of men or follow the words of God.
We are all in this together. Religious liberty and liberality of thought flow from the common conviction that it is freedom, not coercion, that exalts the individual just as it raises up the nation.
Court says RLUIPA Applies To Zoning Limits On 12-Step Program
Friday, May 09, 2008
Next Steps In FLDS Custody Proceedings Described
Faith Group Sues Over California Limits On Its Use of Park To Feed Homeless
Today's Los Angeles Times, reporting on the case, quotes ACLU attorney Hector Villagra who compares the gathering of homeless at the state beach to picnics and barbecues that are allowed there. Park officials say this is different because it is an organized feeding event that requires a special use permit, like all other formal gatherings.
Group Seeking To Set Up Test Case On Tax Code Non-Profit Limits
Oregon Supreme Court Clarifies Standard For Religious Discrimination
10th Circuit Upholds Bald Eagle Protection Against RFRA Challenge
UPDATE: The May 13 San Diego Union-Tribune follows up on the decision with a mixed reaction to it from Sarah Krakoff, an associate professor of law at the University of Colorado. It also reports that Winslow Friday's attorney is considering seeking en banc review of the 3-judge panel's decision.
Two Schools Want Exemption From Quebec's Religious Culture Course
Feds Appoint Prosecutor To Focus On Polygamy Issues
Meanwhile yesterday in St. George, Utah, some 200 people attended the annual conference presented by the Utah-Arizona Safety Net Committee to hear presentations by members of polygamous communities, news media, social service providers and law enforcement. Yesterday's Salt Lake Tribune quotes conference participant Anne Wilde from the "fundamentalist Mormon" advocacy group, Principle Voices, who said that fundamentalist Mormons represent a wide diversity of beliefs, and should not all be lumped together with the FLDS.
Thursday, May 08, 2008
Malaysian Sharia Court Agrees To Cancel Woman's Prior Conversion To Islam
Christian Student Group Sues to Challenge University Speech Code
Evangelical Manifesto Released Urging A "Civil Public Square"
The Associated Press, reported on the document, pointing out that a number of Christian religious leaders on the political right do not support it. Americans United for Separation of Church and State gave the Manifesto qualified praise, or, as it said, it gave it "one amen". More information on the Manifesto, including a lengthy Study Guide, is available on the Evangelical Manifesto website.[W]e repudiate two equal and opposite errors into which many Christians have fallen. One error is to privatize faith, applying it to the personal and spiritual realm only.... The other error, made by both the religious left and the religious right, is to politicize faith, using faith to express essentially political points that have lost touch with biblical truth. That way faith loses its independence, Christians become the "useful idiots" for one political party or another, and the Christian faith becomes an ideology. Christian beliefs become the weapons of political factions....
[W]e repudiate the two extremes that define the present culture wars in the United States..... We are committed to a civil public square – a vision of public life in which citizens of all faiths are free to enter and engage the public square on the basis of their faith, but within a framework of what is agreed to be just and free for other faiths as well....
[W]e are concerned that a generation of culture warring ... has created a powerful backlash against all religion in public life among many educated people.... [W]e are concerned that globalization and the emerging global public square have no matching vision of how to live with our deepest differences on the global stage.... [W]e warn of the danger of a two-tier global public square. This is a model of public life which reserves the top tier for cosmopolitan secular liberals, and the lower tier for local religious believers.
Religious Monuments Case Delays Army Memorial To Plane Crash Victims
In reporting to Congress last week, an Army spokesman wrote: "Due to the ramifications that this case may have on the Army's acceptance of the Bakers Creek Memorial or any other monument funded by private funds, the Army will await the Supreme Court's decision to assess its options." Robert Cutler, executive director of the Bakers Creek Memorial Association, suggested a solution-- have the Army buy the memorial for a nominal amount so it is not "donated". Meanwhile the memorial remains temporarily at the Australian Embassy in Washington. (A posting at Texomas carries a photo of the memorial.)
McCain Speaks Out On International Religious Freedom
There is no right more fundamental to a free society than the free practice of religion. Behind walls of prisons and persecuted before our very eyes in places like China, Iran, Burma, Sudan, North Korea and Saudi Arabia are tens-of-thousands of people whose only crime is to worship God in their own way. No society that denies religious freedom can ever rightly claim to be good in some other way. And no person can ever be true to any faith that believes in the dignity of all human life if they do not act out of concern for those whose dignity is assailed because of their faith. As President, I intend to make religious freedom a subject of great importance for the United States in our relations with other nations.In the speech he also focused on the evils of human trafficking and use of the Internet by child predators. CNN reported on the speech.