Thursday, July 27, 2006

House Members With Opposing Views Have Dinner Over Church-State Issues

The Forward earlier this week reported on an unlikely group of House of Representatives members who have formed a discussion group to focus on church-state issues. The members are Democrats Steve Israel (NY), Susan Davis (CA) and Henry Waxman (CA). The Republicans in the dinner group are Todd Aiken (MO), John Hostettler (IN), and Walter Jones (NC). The diversity of the members is illustrated by the ratings they received in 2005 from the Family Research Council on whether their voting records reflect "the Judeo-Christian worldview". Waxman and Davis got a rating of 0 and Israel had a 8. Aiken, Hostettler and Jones each had a rating of 100.

Rehearing Denied; Supplemental Opinion Issued In Notre Dame Funding Case

Yesterday, the U.S. 7th Circuit Court of Appeals denied an en banc rehearing in Laskowski v. Spellings, (7th Cir., July 26, 2006), a case challenging on Establishment Clause grounds the receipt of federal funds by Notre Dame University for use by it to fund a Catholic teacher training program. In April, a 3-judge panel held that it was possible that the lower court could order Notre Dame to repay the $500,000 grant to the federal Treasury. Along with yesterday's denial of a rehearing, the original panel wrote a supplementary opinion clarifying that whether Notre Dame had to make restitution of the funds depended on whether or not it had reason to know that the grant it was receiving was illegal. The opinion pointed out that Congress cannot make grants to religious institutions without imposing conditions to assure that the funds will be used only for secular purposes. It continued: "Whether appropriate conditions were imposed by the Secretary of Education and were properly observed or implemented by Notre Dame are the issues on the merits that the district court will be resolving in the first instance on remand." The Fort Wayne News-Sentinel reports on the decision.

Greek Government To Build Athens' First Mosque

After 30 years of negotiations and failed attempts, the government of Greece is poised to approve building of Athens' first mosque, and government funds will be used for its construction. Kathimerini reports that while 200,000 Muslims live in Athens, there is still no official place of worship for them. The Inner Cabinet on Tuesday approved plans by Public Works and Environment Minister Giorgos Souflias to do something about this. In April, 10,000 people had petitioned the Education and Religion Ministry asking for the project to move forward.

Report On Religious Liberty In The Americas

Zenit continues to reprint portions of the report by Aid to the Church In Need on religious freedom around the world. Here are the sections of the report dealing with religious freedom in the Americas- 1, 2. Here is what the report has to say about conditions in the United States:
In the United States, the debate involving the conflict between two different ideas of the separation or distinction between religion and the state institutions is played out at the level of civil and individual rights.

The conflict between American society and the Islamic communities is no exception. The latter complain of attacks against their places of meeting and prayer. They pursue legal paths in their attempts to introduce Koranic law into the legal system as has happened in Canada.
Other parts of the report were the subject of a prior posting.

Wednesday, July 26, 2006

Newdow Appeals "In God We Trust" Loss To 9th Circuit

The Pacific Justice Institute has recently announced that an appeal to the 9th Circuit is being filed in Newdow v. Congress of the United States. In the case, a California federal district court upheld the constitutionality of "In God We Trust" on U.S. coins. (See prior posting.) [Thanks to How Appealing for the information.]

House Bill Proposes Prison Goods and Services For Non-Profits, Including Churches

Congress is proposing a new kind of governmental support to non-profit organizations, including religious organizations. The scope of the program became clear when, on Monday, the Congressional Budget Office issued a Report on H.R. 2965, the Federal Prison Industries Competition in Contracting Act of 2005. As described by the Report:
The legislation would authorize the Attorney General to establish a new FPI [Federal Prison Industries] program in federal prisons that, subject to appropriation of the necessary amounts, would produce goods to be donated to nonprofit organizations instead of being offered for purchase to the federal government. In addition, FPI would be authorized to contract with nonprofit organizations and certain public entities for the use of inmate labor to provide charitable services. The bill would authorize the appropriation of $12 million for fiscal year 2008 and $48 million over the 2008-2011 period for these programs.
Section 10 of the bill permits programs to be created to furnish prison-made goods to non-profit or religious organizations that "provide goods or services to low-income individuals who would likely otherwise have difficulty purchasing such products or services in the commercial market." Eligible organizations can suggest programs to FPI.

Section 10 more generally permits any religious (or other non-profit) organization that qualifies under Sections 501(c)(3) or 501(d) of the Internal Revenue Code to contract with the Inmate Work Training Administrator to employ inmates at below minimum wage rates. While there are various restrictions insuring that inmates will only provide non-profit services, and that inmates will not be discriminated against on the basis of religion (or on the basis of race, sex, national origin, disability or political belief), nothing in the bill appears to preclude using inmates to perform services that have religious content.

The bill has been approved by the House Judiciary Committee and will move to the full House for a vote.

Cert. Filed In Maine School Voucher Case

A petition for certiorari has been filed in the U.S. Supreme Court seeking review of the Maine Supreme Court's decision in Anderson v. Town of Durham, according to today's New York Sun. The decision upheld a state school voucher program for students from small towns with no high schools. Towns may pay for those students to attend a non-sectarian public or a private school, but they may not pay for attendance at religious parochial schools. (See prior posting.)

Required DNA Sample Does Not Violate Free Exercise Clause

A New York federal district court has rejected a free exercise challenge to the federal DNA Analysis Backlog Elimination Act. Kurt Kavoukian, on probation after serving a sentence for firearms violations, argued that requiring him to provide a DNA sample is an intrusion into his body prohibited by his religion. In United States v. Kavoukian, 2006 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 50014 (ND NY, July 20, 2006), the court found that the statute, designed to establish a federal DNA database to assist in the identification, arrest, and prosecution of criminals, is a permissible neutral law of general application.

White House Faith-Based Conference In Austin

Yesterday the White House hosted a Conference on Faith Based and Community Initiatives in Austin, Texas. Today's San Antonio Express-News reports on the conference. The article's lead is: "At the intersection of government and religion, Gov. Rick Perry sounded something like a preacher Tuesday as he touted public funds for faith-based and community groups helping the poor, the addicted and refugees."

Liberia Reassures Muslims On Wearing Of Veil

Liberia's Justice Minister Cllr. Frances Johnson-Morris reaffirmed the government's commitment to religious liberty, countering a controversial statement by Police Director Beatrice Munah Sieh who said that people of that faith would not be permitted to cover their faces while walking on the streets. AllAfrica.com reported yesterday that the Justice Minister assured Muslims that the government will protect the Islamic Community like any other religious group. She said Muslims will be allowed to dress in accordance with their religious beliefs. The Police Director's statement was made few days after masked robbers were arrested, and without an understanding of its legal implications.

More New Prisoner Cases

In Hardeman v. Stewart, (10th Cir., July 21, 2006), an inmate raised equal protection and free exercise claims, arguing that prison authorities had refused to recognize the Hebrew Israelites as a separate religion, and had denied him access to various requested religious items. The district court dismissed the claims because the Prison Litigation Reform Act precludes damages for non-physical harm, and any request for injunctive relief was moot because the inmate was transferred to a different facility. The Court of Appeals affirmed.

In Williams v. Bitner, (3d Cir., July 25, 2006), the Third Circuit Court of Appeals held that prison officials did not have qualified immunity in a claim for damages by a Muslim inmate who alleged that his First Amendment free exercise rights had been violated. Pennsylvania prison authorities had assigned Henry Williams to work as a cook in the prison kitchen. He was disciplined after he refused, on religious grounds, to help prepare a meal that contained pork.

In Scott v. Mecklenburg Correctional Center, 2006 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 49905 (WD Va., July 21, 2006), a Virginia state inmate challenged the prison's refusal to approve his participation in a Bible correspondence course in which he had previously enrolled. He also complained that he was not permitted to take his Bible into the recreation yard. A federal district court found that prison officials had a legitimate interest in restricting transient inmates' participation in long term correspondence courses. They also did not discriminate against plaintiff because no materials, secular or religious, are permitted in the recreation yard.

Native American Religious Concerns Cost Washington State $58M

In December 2004, the Washington State Department of Transportation stopped construction of a massive dry dock in Port Angeles, Washington, even though the state had already spent $58 million on it. At the time, the reason for the cancellation was said to be archeological concerns. The dock was located on the site of Tse-whit-zen, an important Klallam Indian village containing at least several hundred intact burials. (Background from History Link.org.) Now it appears that the real reason for ending construction was religious objections raised by the Lower Elwha Klallam tribe.

Washington's Peninsula Daily News yesterday reported that a letter to the auditor investigating the closing down of the project from Allyson Brooks, head of the state Department of Archaeology & Historic Preservation, revealed the true motivation of state officials. She wrote: "the underlying issue . . . is how we incorporate cultural values and religious beliefs into our decision-making processes in a manner that is fair, sensitive, constitutional and still results in a complete project.''

Over 350 bodies of tribal members were reburied after construction began, but the Klallam tribe wanted the remains returned to the Tse-whit-zen site. They believe their ancestors are angry that their remains were removed. Tribal members put red ochre below their eyes when they visit the site to ward off ancestors' anger, and they ceremonially wash with water containing snowberries when they leave so they will not take their ancestor's anger home.

Tuesday, July 25, 2006

High School Coach Wins Right To Join His Team's Prayers

In Newark, New Jersey today, East Brunswick High School football coach Marcus Borden won his federal civil rights suit in which he claimed the right to pray along with his team's players. The court rejected the high school's contention that the Establishment Clause was violated when coach Borden would silently bow his head and "take a knee'' while his players engaged in student-initiated, student-led, nonsectarian pre-game prayer. The Central Jersey Home News Tribune, reporting on the decision, quoted Borden's attorney, Ronald J. Riccio, who said that the decision "reaffirms that government can't be hostile to religion." The lawsuit was filed last November. (See prior posting.)

Promoters Of Baptist Affinity Fraud Convicted

Both today's Washington Post and today's Arizona Republic report that two former executives of the Baptist Foundation of Arizona were found guilty Monday on 3 counts of fraud and one count of knowingly conducting an illegal enterprise in what has been called the largest "affinity fraud" ever. More than 11,000 investors lost more than $550 million in total. The investors, many of them elderly, were encouraged to invest their money at promised high rates and at the same time "do the Lord's work," building Baptist churches and retirement homes. Defendants William Crotts and Thomas Grabinski, however, were acquitted of 23 counts of theft. The jury found that they did not personally profit from the Ponzi scheme. Instead they got in over their heads and then tried to cover it up. Defense attorneys had argued that the foundation could have been able to pay off investors if state regulators had not forced it to stop selling securities in 1999.

Loud Speakers On Bulgarian Mosque Challenged

In Sofia, Bulgaria, both mayor Boiko Borissov and the ultra-nationalist group Ataka have called for removal of the loudspeakers on the Banya Bashi mosque that are used to call the faithful to prayer. The mayor said that the volume of the loudspeakers has been turned down. He urged Christian and Muslim leaders to continue the Bulgarian tradition of peaceful co-existence. The Sofia Echo reports on this as well as on a pending case before Bulgaria’s Commission for Protection Against Discrimination involving two Muslim girls who were banned from wearing traditional Islamic headscarves in school.

Jerusalem Gay Pride Parade Cancelled Because Of Security Concerns

As reported previously, Orthodox Jewish, Muslim and conservative Christian leaders in Jerusalem have called for cancellation of the planned Aug. 10 GLBT World Pride Parade. To Be Publications reported yesterday that the fighting between Israel and Lebanon's Hezbollah has led to the fulfillment of those religious leaders' demands. Orthodox Jews threatened to stage massive counter-demonstrations to the GLBT parade. Jerusalem police had planned to bring in reinforcements from other cities to protect the marchers. Because of the new war with Hezbollah, not only are those reinforcements not available, but some members of Jerusalem's police force have been deployed outside of the city, closer to the war zones. World Pride organizers say they will hold an alternative event.

9th Circuit Issues New Opinions Denying Asylum To Chinese Christian

In Gu v. Gonzales, (9th Cir., July 21, 2006), the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals last week, by a 2-1 vote, upheld the findings of an Immigration Judge denying asylum to a Chinese citizen who claimed past persecution, and fear of future persecution, because of his distribution of Christian religious literature and his attending an unofficial "house church". In doing so, the court withdrew opinions issued in December 2005 reaching the same result (429 F.3d 1209), and substituted new opinions. [CORRECTED-- thanks to several readers.]

Monday, July 24, 2006

Italian Case Challenging Existence of Jesus Reportedly To Be Heard By European Court of Human Rights

Religion Clause reported last February that an Italian judge dismissed a suit against a priest in Viterbo, Italy. The suit charged that the priest's assertion that Jesus had lived violated Italian laws against deceit and impersonation. In March, an appeal in the case was filed with the European Court of Human Rights. (Text of Application to Court.) Today, the website of Luigi Cascioli, the plaintiff who brought the charges against the priest, reports that the European Court of Human Rights has agreed to hear the appeal. The case is Cascioli v. Italy, Case No.14910/06.

Public Schools Try To Accommodate Various Religious Holidays

Public schools and colleges around the country are increasingly being asked to accommodate the holiday observances of students from a wide variety of religious faiths. Some have not been responsive to the requests, but others have. From a school-wide holiday, to a ban on scheduling exams on particular days, to merely permitting a student to have an excused absence, at least some schools are seeking the correct balance, according to an Associated Press article last Friday. Earlier this month the New York state Legislature passed SB 7461 a bill that requires the state Department of Education to make a bona fide effort to schedule state mandated exams on days other than religious holidays. The bill was introduced after the decision by the Department of Education last January to begin statewide tests for third, fourth and fifth-graders on the Islamic holiday of Eid-ul-Adha.

Asatru In Prisons Poses Concerns

An AP story yesterday discusses the growing problems within American prisons posed by prisoners' practice of Asatru-- a pagan religion with roots in Viking mythology. Attention has been focused on the religion as Michael Lenz is scheduled to be executed in Virginia later this week. During an Asatru worship ceremony, Lenz thought that another inmate, Brent Parker, had committed blasphemy, and so he killed him to protect the honor of the gods. The religion is sometimes associated with beliefs in White supremacy, though that connection is disputed by most of its leaders. Britt Minshall, a Baltimore pastor who ministers to inmates, says that some white inmates who felt threatened by black prison gangs formed their own gangs and then found Asatru as a belief system to provide additional security.