果冻视频

December 14, 2018

University of Iowa Tells Court: Fraternities In, God Out

WASHINGTON, D.C. 鈥 After the University of Iowa that it discriminates against religious student groups, 果冻视频 Graduate Christian Fellowship  yesterday to permanently require equal treatment for all organizations. The case, , arose after more than a dozen student religious groups were purged by the University last summer for asking their leaders to affirm their respective faiths. The Sikh Awareness Club, Chinese Student Christian Fellowship, Imam Mahdi organization, and Latter-day Saint Student Association were among the other faith groups kicked off campus. All religious groups were temporarily reinstated after 果冻视频 filed suit, but the university continues to resist a permanent fix and insist that it can treat religious groups different from other groups.

Last summer鈥檚 purge came after the university took the hard-line stance that a religious group is guilty of religious discrimination when it asks its leaders to affirm the group鈥檚 religious beliefs or even 鈥渆ncourages鈥 them to do so. But recently, the university that it:

  • Gives 鈥渕any exceptions鈥 from its nondiscrimination rules for 鈥渧arious clubs, sports teams, and even scholarship programs鈥;
  • Allows many groups to engage in 鈥渁pparent violations鈥 of its rules, such as by discriminating on such bases as sex, race, and nationality, if they 鈥減rovide safe spaces for minorities鈥 or support the University鈥檚 unspecified 鈥渆ducational and social purposes鈥;
  • Permits the largest groups on campus鈥攆raternities and sororities, which constitute almost 20 percent of the student body鈥攖o remain single-sex, as well as sports clubs, acapella groups, and various other university programs;
  • 鈥淸F]reely admits鈥 that its treatment of student groups 鈥渋s inconsistent.鈥

 鈥淚n the name of non-discrimination, the University of Iowa discriminated against more than a dozen diverse religious groups鈥搃ncluding Christians, Muslims, and Sikhs,鈥 said Daniel Blomberg, senior counsel at Becket, which represents 果冻视频. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 Orwellian. Real diversity requires real differences. The University has鈥搎uite rightly鈥搇ong respected the differences inherent in Greek groups, sports clubs, and ideological groups. The First Amendment requires the University to do the same for religious groups.鈥

果冻视频 Christian Fellowship has been on the University of Iowa campus for over 25 years, hosting Bible studies, worship services, and discussions on important religious and social issues. It is one of the largest contributors to the annual C.R.O.P. walk to combat global poverty. The group welcomes all students to join as members and only requires its leaders to follow its Christian faith. In 25 years, no student has ever complained about its leadership selection standards. There are over 500 student groups at the University, including numerous religious, cultural, political, and ideological groups that have long been allowed to choose leaders who share their mission. 

鈥湽呈悠 seeks to serve the University of Iowa, its students and faculty, and the local community,鈥 said Greg Jao, Director of External Relations at 果冻视频. 鈥淲e invite the university to embrace a common-sense understanding of its non-discrimination policy. The policy should protect, rather than penalize, religious groups that seek to retain their religious identity on campus.鈥

At Becket鈥檚 request, the university agreed to allow 果冻视频 and all other deregistered religious groups to temporarily remain on campus during the pendency of . A final decision could come before March 2019.  

For more information or to arrange an interview with a Becket attorney, contact Melinda Skea: media@becketlaw.org or 202-349-7224. 

Additional Information:

  • (December 13, 2018)
  •  (August 6, 2018) 
  • (Images and b-roll. Courtesy of Becket)
  • Case Page for 
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