
STRUGGLING TO ACHIEVE FREEDOM
FOR RELIGION
by
NATHAN J. DIAMENT
Director, Institute for Public Affairs
Union of Orthodox Jewish Congregations of America
As published in the Washington Jewish Week, October 22, 1998
The fight over whether the laws of the United States
provide its citizens with the freedom to fully practice their religions or, conversely,
strive to ensure that societys public square is free from religion continues to be
waged in our nations courts and legislatures.
It is worthwhile -- particularly in the Jewish
community which rightly trains much attention and effort on these issues -- at the start
of a new year and its coincidence with our civic societys renewal in the form
of elections to assess the status of religious freedom initiatives.
Of course, on one fundamental level, the United States remains the preeminent bastion of
religious freedom. More religions are observed here than anywhere else. Yet,
our nation still remains a place where the secular is favored over the religious in
concrete ways. While few suggest the reverse should be the case, many citizens of
many faiths
believe that the U.S. Constitution contemplates religion being treated with respect equal
to non-religion, and certainly not discriminated against. On this account, there
have been some gains in our nations courts and legislatures, but a great deal of
work lies ahead.
Perhaps the most daunting tasks remain in the legislative arena. Over a year ago,
the Supreme Court stuck down the Religious Freedom Restoration Act. As a result,
state or local laws can unintentionally restrict an individuals freedom to practice
his or her religion even if the state has no compelling reason to do so. The day the
Supreme Court rendered its decision, leading senators and representatives as well as state
legislators committed themselves to passing new laws that would respect the high courts
ruling yet redress the threat to religious freedom.
Unfortunately, due to a variety of political
challenges, such
legislation remains unpassed and religious citizens and institutions remain vulnerable to
laws and regulations that restrict their freedom.
We have also been working in congress to pass legislation that would redress some of the
burden that the private sector can place upon religious people. While laws have been
loudly championed and enacted to require employers to accommodate "secular"
needs of their employees (with regard to family and medical leave, for example), current
law asks little of employers in terms of accommodating employees religious needs.
Thus, weve been working in congress to pass the Workplace Religious Freedom
Act. This law would ask employers to reasonably accommodate the religious needs of
their workers within appropriate
circumstances.
Despite having a bipartisan group of sponsors and a
wide range of religious groups behind the bill, it too has failed to overcome its
opponents (such as the business and organized labor lobbies) and will be held over for the
next congress.
The news is not all bad, however, on the legislative front. Congress has begun to
pass pieces of legislation that open the opportunity for "charitable choice"
with regard to social services. Such laws allow religiously affiliated social
service providers to compete alongside private secular providers for federal grants to
provide their services
such as drug rehabilitation or job counseling. In the education policy arena,
congress has also passed a variety of initiatives from voucher proposals to tax
free education savings accounts that embrace the concept of treating religious and
secular families equally. While this is the greatest progress such proposals have
ever made, they have been thwarted by presidential vetos.
In our nations courts, the results for those of us who champion religious freedom
and equality are mixed as well. In the specific context of school funding cases,
rulings have varied. Wisconsins supreme court found Milwaukees pilot
voucher program to be constitutional as did an intermediate Ohio court with regard to
Clevelands. On the other hand, federal trial courts in Vermont and Maine ruled
that even though rural communities subsidize their students attendance at public or
secular private schools in larger towns, they need not provide the same benefit to
families that choose to send their children to parochial schools. However, a federal
appellate court has more recently ruled that a Minnesota school district cannot
discriminate against religious school students in the provision of in-class aides for the
disabled if it provides such aides for secular private school students.
While these rulings seem confused, we can expect the Supreme Court to take up some of
these cases and the more general issue of equality for religion sometime this year.
In light of the fact that the Courts decisions in recent years have tended
toward championing the equality of religion, there is real hope that some progress will be
made in the courts in the very near term.
In sum, the task for us in the coming year is serious and requires commitment. It
requires the entire Jewish community to recognize that there are differences with the
community over some of these issues.
These differences can be traced to policies that were
adopted by some elements of our communal leadership over four decades ago and, it would
seem, should be reexamined in light of the current interests of the Jewish community and
the current state of American society. Our
legislatures and courts seem to be finally moving toward ensuring the freedom for
religion, in all spheres, that the Orthodox community has long been committed to. We
will be fighting for that freedom in the coming year; we hope the entire Jewish community
will join with us.
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