Prominent Chicago Religious Leaders Ask Federal Appellate Court to Protect Government Neutrality in Religion and End Pentagon's Extraordinary Funding for Boy Scout Jamboree (4/5/2006)
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: media@aclu.org
CHICAGO - Two well-known Chicago religious leaders have asked a federal
appellate court in Chicago to uphold the basic constitutional principle of
government neutrality between religious groups and secular groups and bar the
Pentagon from the extraordinary spending of millions of dollars to support
future Boy Scout Jamborees (the only youth organization event so funded by the
Pentagon). The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit is hearing
arguments on Thursday April 6 in Winkler v. Rumsfeld, a case brought by the
American Civil Liberties Union of Illinois.
Last year a federal district court judge in Chicago found that the Pentagon's
special expenditure of more than $7 million for each Jamboree violated the
principle of government neutrality in religion and ordered the funding
stopped. The appellate court argument is the most recent action in the
case brought by the ACLU of Illinois on behalf of religious and community
leaders from Chicago alarmed at the favored treatment afforded by the Pentagon
to the Boy Scouts of America, despite the BSA's religious requirements for
participation. “Government neutrality in religious
activities is a fundamental constitutional value embraced by most Americans,"
said lead plaintiff Eugene Winkler, former pastor at the First United Methodist
Church in Chicago. "Government must be neutral because we are a nation of
many religious views - as well as those who do not practice a religion.
The expenditure of more than $29 million by the Pentagon for an organization
that requires young people to believe in God - and the simultaneous exclusion of
secular organizations from this benefit -- undermines that principle of
neutrality. We trust the appeals court will uphold the decision below.”
Two lead plaintiffs in the case filed in 1999, Winkler and Rabbi Gary Gerson,
said they hoped the appeals court would uphold the judge's order that helps
maintain the critical constitutional principle of government neutrality towards
religion. The Boy Scouts of America, a private organization, requires
youth who participate in their activities to believe in God. Indeed, the
BSA expels youth who do not. Yet Congress and the Pentagon provide the Boy
Scouts with a unique and lucrative benefit, funding of more than $29 million
over the past two decades. No other youth organization competes for this
generous federal benefit. Pentagon support for
the quadrennial Jamboree extends far beyond providing a venue for the
event. Indeed, evidence in the case demonstrated that the Pentagon's
expenditure on behalf of the Jamboree serves no military purpose; rather, the
funding is simply expended to support the BSA's efforts to provide a quality
camping experience for their members. As an example, the Pentagon
once spent a half million dollars for temporary workers to erect and break down
tents. Other goods purchased by the Pentagon for the participants at the
Jamboree include pediatric medical supplies, commercial vehicles and cookie
dough. The Pentagon also spent $65,000 for commemorative mementos to mark
the Jamboree. According to the religious leaders who brought
the case, the extraordinary aid provided to the Jamboree is particularly
alarming because of the BSA's exclusions of non-believers. Before a young
man can join the Scouts, tie a knot or pitch a tent, they are required to swear
an oath of "duty to God." If the youth refuses to sign the oath,
they are not admitted into the Scouts. Moreover, the BSA describes itself
as a religious group, is effectively controlled by religious organizations, has
religious requirements for youth to advance in the ranks and engages in a host
of other religious practices. The evidence in the case also demonstrated
that the Jamboree is explicitly religious. Troop leaders, for example, are
issued a guidebook by the Boy Scouts of America indicating that a prayer book is
"required personal camping equipment" for all youth attendees. The BSA
also issues a "Duty to God" booklet for each participant that recommends prayers
for each day of the Jamboree. Reviewing these facts in the
district court, Judge Blanche Manning of Chicago found the statute that provides
special treatment and special funding for the Boy Scouts Jamboree is not neutral
with regards to religion. The Judge's decision reasoned that the
government aid was "not offered to a broad range of groups; rather, it is
specifically targeted toward the Boy Scouts, which… is a religious organization
from which agnostics and atheists are excluded." "The BSA -
by its own admission - is a religious organization," added Winkler. "The federal
government' simply cannot give special treatment to a private group that
excludes young men who do not profess a particular religious faith."
The lawsuit was filed in 1999. At earlier stages of the
case, the Chicago Public Schools and the Pentagon entered into settlements
agreeing to stop their direct sponsorship of Boy Scout troops. Boy Scouts
can still meet on military bases and military personnel can still participate in
Scout activities on their own time. Charles
Peters, David Scott, Kevin F. Feeney and David Sattelberger of the Schiff Hardin
law firm are co-counsel along with ACLU of Illinois attorneys Adam Schwartz and
Harvey Grossman in representing Reverend Winkler and Rabbi Gerson and the other
plaintiffs.
A copy of the ACLU of Illinois brief in Winkler v. Rumsfeld is available at:
www.aclu-il.org/news/archives/winkler.pdf
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