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This is the second Sikh Coalition
lawsuit against the CDCR. In December 2009, the
Coalition filed a lawsuit against California's
prison system for failing to hire a Sikh correctional
officer job applicant who refused to cut his beard.
That lawsuit remains open and is actively being
litigated.
Coalition Helps Bring
Additional Partners to the Fight
In addition to enlisting
the help of the ACLU and Alston & Bird, the
Sikh Coalition was able to persuade the U.S. Department
of Justice to file a separate lawsuit in order
to protect Mr. Basra's religious rights under
the Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons
Act (RLUIPA). This federal law extends basic religious
freedoms to detainees and is based on the principle
that religious freedom is a fundamental human
right.
The Sikh Coalition is grateful
to its partners at the ACLU and Alston & Bird
for their support, and also to the U.S. Department
of Justice for defending Sikh civil rights.
California Governor and
Attorney General Still Opposing Sikh Civil Rights
On 27th January 2011 in San
Francisco, The Sikh Coalition and several allies
publicly urged California Attorney General Kamala
Harris to stop fighting against Mr. Trilochan
Singh Oberoi, a Sikh who wants to serve as a California
Corrections Officer. The Sikh Coalition, Asian
Law Caucus, Becket Fund for Religious Liberty,
Bay Area Association of Muslim Lawyers and attorneys
from Dhillon & Smith, LLP participated in
a press conference calling on the Attorney General
and Governor Jerry Brown to accept Sikhs into
service at the California Department of Corrections
& Rehabilitation (CDCR). They were among 34
civil rights organizations from around the country
that endorsed a joint letter, initiated by the
Sikh Coalition, in support of Mr. Oberoi.
Nearly six years ago, Mr.
Oberoi was denied the ability to apply for a job
as a prison guard in Folsom, California because
of his religiously mandated beard. On November
10, 2008, after a two-day trial, the State Personnel
Boards Appeal Division determined that he
suffered unlawful workplace discrimination and
asked that his job application be considered forthwith.
Today, more than two years after a final adjudication
in Mr. Oberois favor, he still does not
have a job with CDCR. Instead, the Attorney Generals
office is using California taxpayer dollars to
seek dismissal of Oberois case, even though
beard exemptions are made for medical reasons,
and even though bearded Sikhs now serve with distinction
in the United States Army.
The joint letter to Governor
Brown states We find the California Attorney
Generals adversarial posture in this case
to be demeaning to religious minorities and utterly
inconsistent with your own obligation to defend
civil rights for all Californians. Speaking
at the press conference, Eric Rassbach of the
Becket Fund for Religious Liberty summed it up
poignantly: Just because someone belongs
to a religious minority that is misunderstood
by, or frankly just completely unknown to the
general public, does not make that persons
conscience any less precious or his dignity any
less deserving than the religions that we all
know.
The Sikh Coalition thanks
its organizational partners for standing on the
side of civil rights. As always, we urge Sikhs
everywhere to fearlessly maintain their articles
of faith.
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