Objective coverage of church-state and religious liberty developments, with extensive links to primary sources.
Thursday, February 12, 2009
Louisiana Prison Will Remove Religious References From Monument
Vietnam Recognizes Mennonite Church
Wednesday, February 11, 2009
New York Court Applies "Get" Law In Divorce Case
In this case, the 80-year old husband (a Holocaust survivor) had adamantly refused to provide his 61-year old wife a get, despite a contempt citation issued by a Jewish rabbinic court and demonstrations in front of his home by community members. The court, awarding the husband $400 per month maintenance, conditioned it on his voluntarily giving his wife a get within 45 days. The court said: "It would be unjust and inappropriate to have the wife pay spousal support for the husband's benefit yet she is still 'chained' to him." Last Saturday's New York Daily News reports on the decision. [Thanks to Marc Stern for the lead.]
Child Evangelism Fellowship Wins Preliminary Injunction
New Jersey Town Sued Over Handbilling Restrictions
Canadian Talk Show Violated Ethics Code According To Panel
Appeal Filed With 9th Circuit In Mt. Tenabo Case
UPDATE: KTVN News says that U.S. Distict Judge Larry Hicks on Feb. 11 refused to issue a stay to prevent the project moving forward while the appeal is pending.
Church of England Bans Clergy From Joining Racist British National Party
Tuesday, February 10, 2009
Canadian Teen Says Assault With Kirpan Charges Were Fabricated By Classmates
Vermont Teacher Sued For Proselytizing
California Court Dismisses Mexican Clergy Abuse Case For Lack of Jurisdiction
Yesterday's Los Angeles Metropolitan News-Enterprise reported on the case. Quoting plaintiff's attorney, it reported that this lawsuit against a powerful Mexican Cardinal was largely responsible for exposing clergy sexual abuse in Mexico.
Report Says FBI Has Broken Ties With CAIR
Pope Reaches Out To Critics of His Reconciliation Attempt With Holocaust Denier
In an interview with Der Spiegel published yesterday, Williamson responded to Vatican demands that he recant his views by saying: "I can only say something, the truth of which I am convinced. Because I realize that there are many honest and intelligent people who think differently, I must now review the historical evidence once again." Williamson said he would not travel to Auschwitz, but that he had ordered a copy of the book Auschwitz: Technique and Operation of the Gas Chambers, by Jean-Claude Pressac. Pressac was one time a Holocaust denier, but his views changed when he visited Auschwitz. The book ordered by Williamson reflect those revised views and the evidence that Pressac saw.
Monday, February 09, 2009
British Diplomat Charged Criminally For Anti-Semitic Outburst
Italy's "Terry Schiavo" Case Generates Constitutional Crisis
UPDATE: AP reports that Eulana Englaro died Monday night, as the Italian Parliament rushed to pass a bill to prohibit her feeding tubes from being removed. Rome's mayor Gianni Alemanno, said that the Colosseum-- which has become a symbol in the fight against capital punishment around the world-- would be lit all night Tuesday in mourning for Englaro. Italy's president, Giorgio Napolitano, urged politicians to be silent. [Again thanks to Scott Mange.]
US Officials Complain About Proposed Sri Lankan Anti-Conversion Law
Recent Articles and Book of Interest
- Kevin K. Washburn, Felix Cohen, Anti-Semitism and American Indian Law, (American Indian Law Review, Vol. 33, 2009).
From SmartCILP:
- Marc O. DeGirolami, The Problem of Religious Learning, 49 Boston College Law Review 1213-1275 (2008).
- Robert Joseph Renaud & Lael Daniel Weinberger, Spheres of Sovereignty: Church Autonomy Doctrine and the Theological Heritage of the Separation of Church and State, 35 Northern Kentucky Law Review 67-102 (2008).
- Christie S. Warren, Lifting the Veil: Women and Islamic Law, 15 Cardozo Journal of Law & Gender 33-65 (2008).
- Gender and Religious Conservatism. [Link is to full text.] Articles by Barbara L. Bernier, Colleen Theresa Rutledge, Emily J. Duncan, Lynne Marie Kohm, Gila Stopler and Toni Lester. 15 Duke Journal of Gender Law & Policy 275-417 (2008).
New Book:
- Nonie Darwish, Cruel and Usual Punishment--The Terrifying Global Implications of Islamic Law, (Thomas Nelson, Jan. 2009), reviewed in the Financial Post.
Sunday, February 08, 2009
Utah AG Discloses Contents of Some Seized FLDS Documents
UPDATE: Tuesday's Deseret News publishes additional excerpts for Jeffs' papers detailing his life on the run as a fugitive.
British Town Restores Funding To Christian Home In Settlement
Planned Valentine's Day Morals Policing Stirs Controversy In India
The Australian reported yesterday that Sri Ram Sena leader Pramod Muthalik announced that his followers will be patrolling the streets on Valentine's Day, and any couple they find publicly expressing their love will be taken to the nearest Hindu Temple and forced to marry. The activists will carry a bridal necklace and turmeric paste used in wedding ceremonies and will be accompanied by a priest. Many are distressed with the Sri Ram Sena's activities. IANS reports today that civil liberties proponents are planning protests. Some will form Valentine Help Escort teams to counter Sri Ram Sena activities. The teams will hand over to police anyone assaulting couples on Valentine's Day. Others will carry chili spray to fight off troublemakers.
Recent Prisoner Free Exercise Cases
In Goodvine v. Swiekatowski, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6946 (WD WI, Jan. 26, 2009), a Wisconsin federal district judge permitted a Sunni Muslim prisoner to proceed with RLUIPA and 1st and 14th Amendment claims relating to restrictions on his religious literature, refusing him a copy of the Qu'ran, denying him a halal diet, refusing to adjust his meal schedules to accommodate fasts and refusing to assist him in his religious research.
In Washington v. Brown, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6846 (ED CA, Jan. 21, 2009), a California federal magistrate judge denied defendants' motion for summary judgment and permitted plaintiff to proceed with claims that various prison officials denied him participation in the Ramadan fast.
In Robinson v. Jacquez, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7560 (ND CA, Jan. 23, 2009), a California federal district court held that an inmate's allegations, liberally construed, state a 1st Amendment claim that that he was not provided kosher meals or permitted to attend Jewish religious services.
In Shatner v. Page, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8324 (SD IL, Feb. 4, 2009), an Illinois federal district judge awarded a prisoner, who was a member of both the Church of Light and the Rosicrucian faith, damages totally $1770 for impropoer deprivation of his Sacred Tarot, Tarot cards, religious books and his religious medallion (as well as for imprper reading of his legal mail). The court found violations of plaintiff's free exercise rights, or RLUIPA and of the Illinois Religious Freedom Restoration Act.
Saturday, February 07, 2009
New York City Considering Converting Some Catholic Schools To Charter Schools
Student Christian Groups Lose Challenge To University Non-Discrimination Rules
the CSU student organization program is a limited public forum to which the state may restrict access as long as the restrictions are reasonable and viewpoint-neutral in light of the purpose served by the forum, which they are. The Court further finds the First Amendment burdens imposed by the policy are viewpoint-neutral and uniformly applied to all clubs irrespective of their particular viewpoints. Accordingly, Plaintiffs' free association, free speech, and free exercise rights are not impermissibly infringed by the policy, nor is there any evidence that Plaintiffs have been treated inequitably in their exclusion from the forum due to their discriminatory membership criteria.In the course of its decision, the court said that it was leaving open the question of whether the restrictions imposed by these groups amount to discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation, since some homosexuals could become members under the groups’ criteria. Today's San Diego Union Tribune, reporting on the decision, says an appeal in the case is likely.
Breakaway Church Keeps Property In Largely Evidentiary Ruling
Federal Statute On Tolling Of Limitations For Military Raised In Clergy Abuse Case
Friday, February 06, 2009
Amendment To Stimulus Bill Defeated; Ban on Constrution Aid for Religious Use Remains
As reported by CNS News yesterday, a number of conservative Christian groups have attacked this provision as discriminatory, arguing that the language is so broad that it could prevent a state university from receiving renovation funds for a building if it permitted a group to hold a worship service in the building.
During debate on the stimulus bill yesterday, Sen. Jim DeMint proposed an amendment to eliminate this restriction on grants. (S. Amend. 189). The proposed amendment was defeated by a vote of 43 yes, 54 no, 2 not voting. After the vote, DeMint issued a release captioned "Democrats Vote to Discriminate Against Students of Faith." Blaming the ACLU, DeMint said that the provision remaining in the bill will "in effect bar use of campus buildings for groups like the Fellowship of Christian Athletes, Campus Crusade for Christ, Catholic Student Ministries, Hillel, and other religious organizations." This appears to be something of an overstatement. The bill would preclude grants to renovate buildings used primarily by such groups, but not for other campus buildings. The ACLU says there is nothing novel about this restriction. (Fox News.)
UN Reviews Saudi Arabia Human Rights Record Today
Georgia Good News Club Lawsuit Settled
Britain's National Health Service Issues Guide On Religion In Health Care
Members of some religions, including Mormons, Jehovah’s Witnesses, evangelical Christians and Muslims, are expected to preach and to try to convert other people. In a workplace environment this can cause many problems, as non-religious people and those from other religions or beliefs could feel harassed and intimidated by this behaviour.Commenting on the issue, Dr Peter Saunders, general secretary of the Christian Medical Fellowship, said: "It is quite ironic that people seem to be seeing Christian belief as something unhelpful."
High School Sued Over Refusal To Recognize Student Bible Club
Property Adjudication In Lubavitch Feud is Upheld, But Injunction Reversed
the existence of a divisive doctrinal dispute within the Lubavitch community does not render this action nonjusticiable, even if the facts underlying the action arise from that dispute and ... the commencement of the action was motivated by that dispute. Property disputes between rival religious factions may be resolved by courts, despite the underlying doctrinal controversy, when it is possible to do so on the basis of neutral principles of law....However the court did reverse the award of a permanent injunction against CLI, finding that plaintiffs failed to show a threatened or probable violation of their property rights. There was no evidence linking CLI to vandalism against a plaque on the building. [Thanks to Y.Y. Landa for the lead.]
Thursday, February 05, 2009
Obama Sets Up Revamped Faith-Based Office; Delays Decisions On Religion-Based Hiring By Grantees
President Barack Obama today issued an Executive Order (full text) setting up the White House Office of Faith-Based and Neighborhood Partnerships as the successor to the Bush administration's Office of Faith Based and Community Initiatives. Several paragraphs were added to the section of the Bush Executive Order expanding the functions of the Office. Among the additions are "ensur[ing] that services paid for with Federal Government funds are provided in a manner consistent with fundamental constitutional commitments guaranteeing the equal protection of the laws and the free exercise of religion and prohibiting laws respecting an establishment of religion."
The Executive Order creates a new President's Advisory Council on Faith-Based and Neighborhood Partnerships made up of not more than 25 members. In a separate announcement, the President today named the first 15 members. They are a diverse group, including some individuals from secular social service agencies, as well as religious ones. A number of Protestant clergy, an academic (Melissa Rogers of Wake Forest University), and the president of Catholic Charities USA are among the Council members. As previously announced, the President also appointed Joshua DuBois as Director of the new office. (See prior posting.)
One provision in the Executive Order allows the White House to submit to the Attorney General constitutional and statutory questions on whether existing or prospective grants and practices are consistent with law. This reflects the President's decision not to issue a blanket regulation on whether recipients of faith-based funding can hire on religious grounds. Instead, as reported today by Politico, it will consider the issue on a case-by-case basis. According to US News, this is consistent with a report issued by the Brookings Institution last December (full text) that called for further study of the issue based on better data. (See prior related posting.)
Obama Gives Wide-Ranging Talk At National Prayer Breakfast
it strikes me that this is one of the rare occasions that still brings much of the world together in a moment of peace and goodwill. I raise this history because far too often, we have seen faith wielded as a tool to divide us from one another – as an excuse for prejudice and intolerance.Previewing the Executive Order that he will sign later today creating the White House Office of Faith-Based and Neighborhood Partnerships, he said:
The goal of this office will not be to favor one religious group over another – or even religious groups over secular groups. It will simply be to work on behalf of those organizations that want to work on behalf of our communities, and to do so without blurring the line that our founders wisely drew between church and state.... We will also reach out to leaders and scholars around the world to foster a more productive and peaceful dialogue on faith.Obama also spoke of his own religious upbringing and journey:
I was not raised in a particularly religious household. I had a father who was born a Muslim but became an atheist, grandparents who were non-practicing Methodists and Baptists, and a mother who was skeptical of organized religion, even as she was the kindest, most spiritual person I’ve ever known....
I didn’t become a Christian until many years later, when I moved to the South Side of Chicago after college. It happened not because of indoctrination or a sudden revelation, but because I spent month after month working with church folks who simply wanted to help neighbors who were down on their luck....
Oath Requirement In Oregon Tax Form Violates Free Exercise Rights
Muslim Charity May Get Access to Seized Documents
The order is a first step toward giving KindHearts access to the documents, hard drives, videotapes and the like that up to now have been available only under severe restrictions. KindHearts' attorneys say that the organization needs access to the documents to defend against the charges that it funded the terrorist organization Hamas. Up to now, a magistrate's order gave KindHearts' lawyers access to a computer disk containing documents, but the attorneys were not permitted to print them out or share them with their clients. Under the court's new order, the government can still withhold specific documents where explicit justification is furnished.
Pope Says Holocaust Denying Bishop Must Recant
The viewpoints of Bishop Williamson on the Shoah are absolutely unacceptable and firmly rejected by the Holy Father, as he himself noted last Jan. 28, when, referring to that savage genocide, he reaffirmed his full and indisputable solidarity with our brother recipients of the First Covenant, and affirmed that the memory of that terrible genocide should induce "humanity to reflect on the unpredictable power of evil when it conquers the human heart," adding that the Shoah remains "for everyone a warning against forgetting, against negating or reductionism, because violence committed against even one human being is violence against all."
Bishop Williamson, to be admitted to episcopal functions in the Church, must also distance himself in an absolutely unmistakable and public way from his position on the Shoah, which was unknown to the Holy Father in the moment of the lifting of the excommunication.
OSCE Find Problems With Kazakhstan's Religion Law
Wednesday, February 04, 2009
Court Affirms IRS Has Misdelegated Church Summons Authority
Missouri Baptist Convention Loses Attempt To Regain Conference Center
Canadian Court's Order Against Falun Gong Focuses On Expressive Conduct
Court Issues Preliminary Injunction In Indiana Released Time Program
5th Circuit Hears Arguments In Texas Moment of Silence Case
Rabbinic Judges In Israel Sue To Challenge New Judicial Appointments
Title VII Suit Against DC Transit Authority Settled
Court Details How To Measure Distance From Church For Liquor License
Tuesday, February 03, 2009
Senate Version of SCHIP Authorizes Grants To Faith-Based Groups
Darwin Day Poster Placed In Key Cities
Indian Court Rejects Constitutional Challenge To Appointment of Temple Manager
In Sri Sabanayagar Temple,Chidambaram v. State of Tamil Nadu, (Madras High Ct., Feb. 2, 2009), the High Court first focused on Article 26 of the Constitution that protects the right of every "religious denomination" to maintain its own religious institutions and manage its own religious affairs. The court ruled that the Dikshidars were not a religious denomination, so any claim they had fell under Section 25 of the Constitution that protects "freedom of conscience and the right freely to profess, practise and propagate religion." The section goes on, however, to provide that this does not prevent the government from "regulating or restricting any economic, financial, political or other secular activity which may be associated with religious practice." The court ruled that management of the Temple and Temple offerings are not an integral part of religion or religious practice. Therefore they are not protected by Section 25.
UPDATE: The Feb. 6 Times of India reports that the Podhu Dikshidhars have filed an appeal of the High Court's decision, claiming that the court was wrong in concluding that funds had not been properly accounted for. The appeal also argues that any mismanagement charges should be adjudicated only by the Hindu Religious and Charitable Endowment commissioner, and that Temple administration should not be vested in someone not belonging to the Dikshidhars.
Church Loses RLUIPA Challenge To Denial of Use Permit
Private Baccalaureate Plans Satisfy All Sides In Florida School District
Building on this experience, Rev. Rogers is beginning a nationwide grassroots campaign called "Got Your Bacc." A new website describes plans to enlist churches to sponsor baccalaureate ceremonies for local high schools. The site includes resources for those planning ceremonies.
Bolivian President Says Catholic Church Is Enemy Of His Reforms
5th Circuit Hears Arguments In Parochial School Bid To Join Sports League
Kirill Installed; Russia's President Stresses Church-State Separation
Monday, February 02, 2009
Justice Department Will Likely Focus on Race Instead of Religious Discrimination
UPDATE: CNN reports that Eric Holder was confirmed by the Senate Monday night by a vote of 75-21.
Botswana Proposal To Force Sale of Non-Halal Meat Stirs Controversy
Conversion To "Prison Islam" Is Popular
Recent Articles of Interest
- Frances Raday, Traditionalist Religious and Cultural Challengers - International and Constitutional Human Rights Responses, (Israel Law Review, Vol. 41, pp. 596-634, 2008).
- Joel A. Nichols, Evangelicals and Human Rights: The Continuing Ambivalence of Evangelical Christians' Support for Human Rights, (Journal of Law and Religion, Vol. 7, 2009).
- Elizabeth Rose Schlitz, Learning from Mary: The Feminine Vocation and American Law, (Ave Maria Law Review, Vol. 8, 2009).
- Christopher C. Lund, Legislative Prayer and the Secret Costs of Religious Endorsements,(January 31, 2009).
- Neil W. Hamilton, Faculty Professionalism: An Opportunity for Catholic Higher Education to Vitalize the Academic Profession's Social Contract, (Current Issues in Catholic Higher Education, Vol. 25, p. 177, 2008).
- Josh Blackman, This Lemon Comes as a Lemon: The Lemon Test, Legislative History, and the Pursuit of a Statute's Secular Purpose, (January 17, 2009).
From SmartCILP:
- Francis J. Beckwith, The Courts, Natural Rights, and Religious Claims as Knowledge, 49 Santa Clara Law Review 429-458 (2009).
- David Crump, Natural Selection, Irreducible Complexity, and the Bacterial Fagellum: A Contrarian Approach to the Intelligent Design Debate, 36 Pepperdine Law Review 1-57 (2008).
- Nantiya Ruan, Accommodating Respectful Religious Expression in the Workplace, 92 Marquette Law Review 1-32 (2008).
Indonesian Police Hold Sect Leader, Preliminarily Charged With Blasphemy
Sunday, February 01, 2009
Court Orders Amish Couples To Comply With Building Code Or Vacate Homes
British Court Convicts Father For Encouraging Son In Ashura Rite
Two Cases Result In Victory For Religious Accommodation In Employment
Meanwhile AP reported yesterday that the Las Vegas, Nevada police department has settled a suit brought against it by an Orthodox Jewish detective who, under departmental dress rules, was prohibited from wearing a beard and head covering. Detective Steve Riback won an initial victory in an August federal district court ruling. (See prior posting.) Under the settlement, Riback will be allowed to wear a neatly trimmed beard and a baseball cap without a logo or with the departmental logo. In addition, the police department will pay $350,000 in damages. Under the settlement, Riback agreed not to apply for a promotion or transfer for two years, and will need to file a new accommodation request if in the future he is transferred out of his current plain-clothes unit.
Fiji Village Chief Bans Sunday Travel Except For Church
Recent Prisoner Free Exercise Cases
In White v. Sherrod, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 5767 (SD IL, Jan. 28, 2009), and Illinois federal district court dismissed a federal prisoner’s claim that he was prevented from speaking at a religious service after he was disciplined for encouraging a group demonstration at a previous Rastafarian religious service.
In Hyde v. Fisher, (ID App., Jan. 28, 2009), an Idaho Court of Appeals upheld a state maximum security prison’s ban on sweat lodge ceremonies and its restrictions on possession of religious property brought by an inmate who practices Odinism and Native American religion. Plaintiff claimed that these policies violated RLUIPA and Idaho’s Free Exercise of Religion Protected Act. The court concluded, however, that the state had not shown that a total ban on smudging ceremonies is the least restrictive means of furthering the compelling interest in safety and security.
In Mitchell v. New York State Department of Correctional Services, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 5157 (WD NY, Jan. 26, 2009),a New York federal district court rejected a prisoner’s claim that the prison’s Religious Alternative Meals did not adequately accommodate his Nation of Islam dietary requirements.
In Ashanti v. Tilton, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4767 (ED CA, Jan. 23, 2009), a California federal magistrate judge permitted a Muslim prisoner to proceed with his claims that he was not being provided a halal diet and that the prison does not provide an interfaith chapel suitable for Muslim prisoners to use.
In Warren v. Kolender, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4817 (SD CA, Jan. 22, 2009), a California federal district court rejected a challenge by plaintiff to the lack of religious services for detainees, as opposed to prisoners, in the San Diego County jail. Plaintiff was held there for a period of time during hearings on whether he should be classified as a sexually violent predator. The court found that it was religious volunteers themselves, not jail officials, who decided to offer more religious services to prisoners than to detainees. UPDATE: The magistrate judge's recommendation, which was rejected by the court, is at 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 106905 (May 23, 2008).
In Reischauer v. Jones, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6358 (WD MI, Jan. 29, 2009), a Michigan federal district court rejected 1st Amendment and RLUIPA challenges by an inmate who claimed that authorities denied his requests for Islamic weekly Jum'ah services and for religious books from the Muslim Brotherhood Religious Library. The court also rejected claims that plaintiff was removed from the monthly Ramadan fast list without his consent and was wrongly denied a bag meal for breaking the fast at the Eid celebration.
In Hall v. Cole, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6412 (D NJ, Jan. 28, 2009), a New Jersey federal district court permitted an inmate to proceed with his claim that his 1st Amendment rights were violated when he was denied access to religious services because he was in administrative segregation for protection as a witness in a high profile case.
In Goods v. Pylant, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 106800 (WD LA, Dec. 16, 2008), a Louisiana federal magistrate judge recommended dismissal of a plaintiff's claim that his free exercise rights were violated when, because of his confinement in lock-down, he was prohibited from attending church services.
In Brown v. Unfried, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6436 (SD IL, Jan. 29, 2009), an Illinois federal district judge permitted a prisoner to proceed with his claim that authorities refused to accommodate his observance of the Ramadan fast.
In State v. Bain, (VT Sup. Ct., Jan. 14, 2009), the Vermont Supreme Court rejected a prisoner's claim that his free exercise rights were violated when he was ordered to submit a DNA sample for the state's DNA data base.
In Iswed v. Caruso, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6347 (WD MI, Jan. 29, 2009), a prisoner complained he was not allowed to make overseas phone calls to his family. A Michigan federal district court rejected plaintiff's free execise challenge to this for lack of factual allegations supporting the claim.
Moderate Elected Somali President; Wants To Correct Radical Interpretation of Islam
Saturday, January 31, 2009
Videos Show Questioning Process In Immunization Waiver Application
Sudan Expels US Aid Group From Darfur Over Bibles
Reaction Is Mixed To New Head Of White House Faith Based Office
Proposed Texas Law Would Aid Break-Away Congregations In Property Fights
Hawaii Court Rejects Free Exercise Defense To Marijuana Use
Friday, January 30, 2009
Senate Stimulus Bill Excludes House Bill's Faith-Based Funding; Both Versions Limit Grants for Sectarian College Buildings
Also the Senate bill, in authorizing grants to state higher education agencies for "Higher Education Facilities", imposes limits on sub-grants to colleges and universities for renovation and modernization of buildings. No grant may be used for "modernization, renovation, or repair of facilities— (i) used for sectarian instruction, religious worship, or a school or department of divinity; or (ii) in which a substantial portion of the functions of the facilities are subsumed in a religious mission..." The House bill contains the same limitation.
Senate Passes S-Chip Expansion After Rejecting Two Abortion Related Amendments
UPDATE: Inside Catholic reports that only 6 of the 24 Catholic U.S. Senators voted to restore the Mexico City Policy. [Thanks to PewSitter for the lead.]