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Marines Must Exempt Sikhs from Boot Camp Shaving Requirements
So holds the D.C. Circuit, relying on federal statutes protecting religious freedom.
From Singh v. Berger, decided today by the D.C. Circuit, in an opinion by Judge Patricia Millett, joined by Judges Neomi Rao and Michelle Childs:
Jaskirat Singh, Milaap Singh Chahal, and Aekash Singh wish to serve their Nation by enlisting in the United States Marine Corps. They are each fully qualified to enlist, having satisfied the Corps' pre-enlistment criteria. There is just one barrier to their entry. Jaskirat, Milaap, and Aekash are members of the Sikh faith, which requires them, as relevant here, to maintain unshorn hair and beards and to wear certain articles of faith. Those religious practices conflict with the Marine Corps' standard grooming policy for the initial training of newly enlisted recruits, commonly known as boot camp. The Corps has agreed to accommodate Plaintiffs' religious commitments (with some limitations not relevant here) after each of them finishes basic training. But it will brook no exception for the Sikh faith during those initial thirteen weeks of boot camp….
[I]n exercising their "plenary constitutional authority over the military," the Political Branches have repeatedly required the military to carefully balance its need for disciplined uniformity with the religious needs of service members.
For example, Congress responded promptly and directly to the Supreme Court's decision in Goldman v. Weinberger (1986), which rejected a service member's First Amendment claim to wear a yarmulke while in uniform. A statute passed the following year instructed the military not to ban religious apparel in uniform unless it would "interfere with the performance of the member's military duties" or disrupt a "neat and conservative" appearance.
Then, in 1993, Congress enacted the Religious Freedom Restoration Act ("RFRA"). RFRA prohibits the federal government from "substantially burden[ing] a person's exercise of religion" unless the Government "demonstrates that application of the burden to the person" is the "least restrictive means" of furthering a "compelling" interest. As the Government has recognized, RFRA, with its demanding compelling-interest and least-restrictive-means test, "undoubtedly 'applies in the military context.'"
As the Supreme Court has explained, "Congress's express decision to legislate the compelling interest test indicates that RFRA challenges should be adjudicated in the same manner as constitutionally mandated applications of the test, including at the preliminary injunction stage." As under the First Amendment, RFRA's "compelling interest test" is an "affirmative defense" for which the Government bears the burden of persuasion, and it subjects governmental action to strict scrutiny. Strict scrutiny is an "exceptionally demanding" test. If the Government can achieve its interests without burdening religion, "it must do so." By subjecting military decisions to RFRA scrutiny, the Political Branches determined, in their expert judgment, that Americans need not surrender their faith to fight for their Nation absent demonstrated necessity.
Since RFRA, Congress and multiple Presidents have doubled down on their commitment to accommodating religion within military life. In the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2013, Congress specifically instructed the military to accommodate the "conscience, moral principles, or religious beliefs" of service members and forbade any disciplinary action based on such beliefs to the extent "practicable." Congress expanded that protection the following year by narrowing the grounds on which the military could justify disciplinary action and by requiring an Inspector General report on freedom of religion and conscience in the military.
Most recently, in 2015, the Political Branches expressly acknowledged the "numerous religious traditions" represented among service members, including "Christian, Hindu, Jewish, Muslim, [and] Sikh," and determined that this diversity "contributes to the strength" of the armed forces and should be "promote[d]."
Citing RFRA, and in line with those directives, the Army, Navy, Air Force, and Coast Guard, as well as their training Academies, each accommodate the Sikh religious practices at issue here during both initial recruit training and military service.
The Marine Corps, though, has refused in this case to make a religious exception to its uniform and grooming requirements for Plaintiffs during boot camp. The Corps' Uniform Regulations require men ordinarily to keep "clean-shaven" faces and prohibit wearing religious articles absent authorization. Also, during boot camp, a male recruit must weekly "have his entire hair length clipped to the scalp[.]" …
As relevant here, Sikhism forbids its adherents to cut the hair on their head or to shave the hair on their face (kesh) and requires men to wear a turban or a patka (a smaller covering) over their heads. Adherents also must wear a specific metal bracelet (kara). Additionally, those who have gone through an initiation ceremony must carry a small ceremonial dagger under their clothes (kirpan), wear specific undershorts (kacchera), and insert a small ceremonial comb in their hair (kanga). All three plaintiffs may not shave their hair and must wear a patka or turban over their heads and a bracelet. Milaap Chahal, having gone through the initiation ceremony, also must wear the dagger, undershorts, and comb….
Between March and November of 2021, Jaskirat Singh, Milaap Chahal, and Aekash Singh sought to enlist in the Marine Corps. They each passed the Armed Services Vocational Battery test, and were otherwise "found to be mentally, morally, and physically qualified for accession in to the Marine Corps." Each then submitted a pre-accession request for a waiver of the requirement that they shave their heads and faces, and permission to cover their heads with a turban or patka and wear a bracelet. Milaap Chahal also asked to be allowed to carry the additional articles of faith under his uniform.
The Marine Corps granted each request in part on substantially identical terms. Citing its "compelling interest" in "instilling in each Marine an identity as part of a team" and in "break[ing] down recruits' individuality," the Corps withheld all accommodations during the thirteen-week basic training program. But the Corps committed to allowing Plaintiffs to wear unshorn hair, neatly tied beards, turbans or patkas, and a steel bracelet after basic training, except "when receiving hostile fire pay or imminent danger pay," or when a battalion or squadron commander determines that "operational necessity" requires a suspension. JChahal's request to wear religious undershorts, a comb, and a ceremonial dagger also was only granted for after basic training, and subject to similar conditions….
The court concluded that the government's rationale didn't pass strict scrutiny:
We note at the outset that the Marine Corps does not assert a compelling interest grounded in any safety concerns for Plaintiffs or their fellow recruits arising from the requested accommodations. Neither does it argue that the presence of unshorn hair or faith articles will interfere physically with the boot camp training regimen. Nor does it contend that unshorn hair, groomed in compliance with Marine Corps standards and covered with a turban or patka, is incompatible with being a Marine after boot camp. Quite the opposite: The Marine Corps stands ready to accommodate Plaintiffs' unshorn hair and religious articles after boot camp and throughout their careers, with limited exceptions not relevant here.
Instead, relying solely on a declaration from Colonel Adam Jeppe, a Marine Corps officer involved in denying Plaintiffs' accommodation requests, the Marine Corps argues that excepting the Plaintiffs from the repeated ritual of shaving their faces and heads alongside fellow recruits, and permitting them to wear a head covering, will impede its compelling interest in forging unit cohesion and a uniform mindset during boot camp. Colonel Jeppe explains that uniformity is crucial to the "psychological transformation" by which civilians acquire the "team mentality," "willingness to sacrifice," and "esprit de corps" that are "the hallmark of the Marine Corps." This transformation does not require that "every [M]arine look[ ] the same." Rather, it requires that recruits (1) follow "the same set of regimented practices," and (2) be "stripped of their individuality." Just as all recruits suspend "individual expression, freedom of movement, and freedom of dietary choices," so too, Colonel Jeppe reasons, must Plaintiffs shed religious practices that symbolize their individual beliefs.
We fully credit the vital importance of training Marines "ready to make the sacrifices necessary" to defend the Nation. And we tread with great care knowing that the "complex, subtle, and professional decisions as to the composition[ and] training" of "military force[s]" are matters of expert "military judgment[ ]" assigned to the Political Branches rather than to the judiciary. For that reason, we "indulge the widest latitude" in considering the Marine Corps' interest in fostering cohesion and unity among its members, which surely qualifies as compelling.
But even giving the widest berth to the Corps' compelling interest in enforcing its grooming and appearance policies generally, RFRA requires us to ask the more particularized question of whether the Corps "has such an interest in denying an exemption" to these specific plaintiffs. "Once properly narrowed," the Marine Corps' explanation founders. More specifically, Colonel Jeppe's claimed compelling need for inflexible grooming uniformity does not stand up against the "system of exceptions" to boot camp grooming rules that the Corps has already created and that seriously "undermine[ ]" the Corps' contention that it "can brook no departures" for Plaintiffs. [The court noted exemptions already given to recruits who suffer from pseudofolliculitis barbae, a condition that is common among black men, and that causes "painful pustules and lesions while shaving"; exemptions given to women recruits; and the lack of similar rules in the Naval Academy, relevant given that "the Marine Corps is part of the Navy." It added: -EV]
[T]he Marine Corps has [also] chosen to moderate its grooming requirements when doing so advances recruitment interests. Specifically, the Corps permits tattoos anywhere on a recruit's body except for their head, neck, or hands—and even that latter restriction is subject to exceptions.
Yet tattoos are a quintessential expression of individual identity. Still, the Corps permits them during boot camp not because tattoos comport with the Corps' interest in stripping recruits of individuality, but because "their prevalence in society creates a potential problem for recruitment," and they "cannot be readily removed[.]"
If the need to develop unit cohesion during recruit training can accommodate some external indicia of individuality, then whatever line is drawn cannot turn on whether those indicia are prevalent in society or instead reflect the faith practice of a minority.
Nor can the Marine Corps tenably rely on the difficulty of tattoo removal to justify the differential treatment. Sikhs have historically endured persecution, torture, and death rather than surrender their faith indicia. So the removal of a religiously commanded article of faith could be far more "difficult" for Plaintiffs than the temporary physical discomfort of a tattoo's excision.
In short, even fully crediting the Marine Corps' overarching compelling interests in developing unit cohesion, stripping individuality, and building a team-oriented state of mind, the Government has not come close to meeting its burden of showing "why it has a particular interest" in denying hair, beard, and religious article exceptions to these Plaintiffs "while making them available to others" in the same or analogous form. In other words, the Corps has not shown, in light of its preexisting exemptions to the grooming process—which go largely unexamined by Colonel Jeppe—that denying these accommodations would have any impact on its claimed interests….
Plaintiffs' prospects of success are even greater because the Marine Corps has failed to demonstrate that denying Plaintiffs the same accommodations during boot camp that they would be given during later service in the Corps is the "least restrictive means" of advancing its interest in developing unit cohesion and a team-oriented mindset. [Details omitted. -EV] …
To sum up, Plaintiffs have demonstrated not just a likely, but an overwhelming, prospect of success on the merits of their RFRA claim. At a general level, the Government has certainly articulated a compelling national security interest in training Marine Corps recruits to strip away their individuality and adopt a team-oriented mindset committed to the military mission and defense of the Nation. But RFRA requires more than pointing to interests at such a broad level. The Marine Corps has to show that its substantial burdening of these Plaintiffs' religion furthers that compelling interest by the least restrictive means.
That is where the Marine Corps has come up very short given (1) the series of exemptions for unshorn head and facial hair already allowed; (2) the absence of any particularized explanation as to why regulating Plaintiffs' maintenance and grooming of their beards and hair would interfere with the development of Marines' fitness in a way that other analogous exemptions have not; and (3) the failure of the Corps to even consider, let alone refute, that less restrictive alternatives would serve the Corps' recruit-training interests.
There may well be ways in which the recruit training needs of the Marine Corps differ from those of the other military branches, and there no doubt are aspects of the training regimen that cannot safely be compromised. But Plaintiffs have persuasively shown that, after almost two years of administrative and legal proceedings, the Marine Corps has not come forward with any justification for denying these requested accommodations during boot camp that could meet RFRA's stringent burden. While the Government remains free to offer further justifications before the district court, it has offered this court no reason to believe that any such representations will change the record in a relevant way….
One function of religious freedom rules is precisely to have the nation benefit—when it's possible to do without serious cost to compelling government interests—from having people of all religions fully participate in public life. That seems particularly apt with regard to the ability to serve in military, and in particular with regard to Sikhs, who are generally seen as having a formidable military tradition.
Congratulations to Eric Baxter (Becket Fund), and Amandeep S. Sidhu, Amrith Kaur Aakre, Giselle Klapper, Daniel H. Blomberg, Diana Verm Thomson, Daniel D. Benson, and Laura Wolk, who represent the plaintiffs.
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I was going to comment some snark about how, after the Covid crazies, this is the second time in recent weeks that religious claims trump the military-industrial complex, but objectively this is of course stupid all around. The US Armed Forces should be thanking all the deities on their bare knees that there are Sikh willing to enlist, because as a people they are the biggest badasses in the world, and have been for centuries.
and even in the future, as the Baddest Assest Sikh of them all, Khan Noonien Singh, proved in "Star Trek 2"
What makes this “of course stupid all around", instead of just stupid on the part of the Marine Corps?
Ever served with the Marines? most of them couldn't spell "Stupid"
Great guys though, no better friend, no worse enemy,
and I was a "Squid", we Shit on all Marine Life,
Frank "USMC", "Unlimited Shit & Mass Confusion"
LOL. The Gurkhas have entered the chat, and the kukris’ are out.
LOL - that's who I was thinking of. as well.
The Maori taiaha may also make an appearance in this conversation.
The British position in respect of all three in the twentieth century was simply to thank God they were on our side and not the enemy's.
Hear, hear !
R. Lee Ermey died too soon,
Bearded Sikhs? When have *they* done any real fighting?
/sarc
Next they'll take Bearded Dragons
"The Corps has agreed to accommodate Plaintiffs' religious commitments (with some limitations not relevant here) after each of them finishes basic training. But it will brook no exception for the Sikh faith during those initial thirteen weeks of boot camp…."
What the hell were the Marines thinking? This wasn't a bunch of pudgy hippies being douches and claiming it's against their Jedi faith.
The whole point of Marine Corpse Basic Training is to beat the Individuality out of Peoples, it's why Lee Harvey had such trouble with his learning Roosh-un and Commie sympathies, doesn't go over well with your basic Ass in the Grass Jarhead.
They did teach him to shoot well though, about the only thing in his life he succeeded at,
Frank "Yesterday I couldn't spell "Marine", now I are one"
The more fundamental question that affects a lot more service members would be why is it not a violation of the equal protection clause that male recruits must shave their heads but females don't have to?
Not only don't the XX's "have to" if they were to shave their heads, it's considered a "trendy or eccentric styles” and they'll have to wear a wig (in the 90's WM's (I'd tell you but....) were also required to wear make up) Ditto with "unnatural" hair coloration, (strange, the whole Marine Corpse Experience is about "Unnatural" activity)
Yeah, that "GI Jane" movie was total bullshit, right from the incorrect title (any SEAL would rip your lungs out if you called "them" (I'm woke!) a "GI"
Frank:
Since the armed forces of not just India, but also the UK and many Commonwealth nations, have been successful in training Sikhs for military service without infringing on their religious beliefs there seems no compelling reason for the Marines not to be able to do likewise.
Reminds me of the sad episode in the 1970's when a branch of the Royal Canadian Legion refused to allow Sikh veterans to join because they wouldn't remove their turbans when entering a room with a photo of the Queen. It never seemed to occur to those misguided bigots that His Majesty King George VI never required anything like that when awarding medals in person to Sikh soldiers.
More royalist than the King, eh?
Why aren't they pumping gas?
But seriously is this the first time in the long history of the US military that this issue has come up? Has it been the case that no Sikh has ever served?
I suppose that before RFRA, they either shaved their beards or didn't enlist.
Or enlisted in another branch of the military.
If the Marines had any brains, they'd explicitly try to form an all-Sikh company.
Pretty sure Hairy Truman Intergrated the Military, I don't know, in the 1940's.
Now an entire female unit would work, (only 1 is the Recruit Training Battalion at PI) get their periods all Synchronized, and even more importantly, their PMS, talk about "Shock Troops"!
I'm going to have to side with the Marines on this one. It isn't a matter of religion, it's a matter of safety. I was on board a Navy ship in 1983 when we had a fire in Engineering. The fire was put out quickly, but, five men ended up in Medical. One was Heat Prostration and the other four were for Carbon Monoxide poisoning.
All four of them were wearing OBA's (Oxygen Breathing Apparatus), all four of them had beards. It was determined that their beards prevented the OBA from sealing against their faces.
That justification might have made sense if they hadn't, in this case, explicitly stated that the rule only applied to basic training, and he could wear his beard afterward.
Love looking at those "Cruise Books" from the 70's/80's Nimitz's Engineering Department could be roadies for ZZ top, My recruiter in 1983 looked like Cat Stevens (only recruited Officers, was actually honest, told me I'd have to serve on ship/Marines before doing residency, and that the current Sec Nav had a hardon for Beards and they'd be banned by the time I grad-jew-ma-cated)
Must be the Native-Amurican in me, cause can't grown facial hair for shit, tried growing one in "Desert Storm" ended up looking like a teenage Vincent Price,
Frank
You want to keep your beard? Don't join the fucking military!
Hell, I'd make them shave off their beards even if they were drafted!
It's crap like this that's ruining the country.
X-zactly,
I was an effin Doctor, and got total bullshit from day 1 (Plane to Doctors/Nurses/Lawyers Navy "Knife & Fork" School was delayed (my fault obviously) so I don't get there till 9pm Sunday, have to stand in back of the room like 5th grade)
My "Buddy Holly" glasses were considered "faddish" (is that a word?) so I had to wear the regulation "BCG" (Birth Control Glasses, because if you wore them....) Failed a room inspection so had to get re-inspected 8am Saturday (my 06 Histo-pathologist Roommate wasn't happy, although it was his fuck up that failed us) No lefthanded desks for the BS classes we had to take, so I couldn't take notes (remember taking notes?) and frequently fell asleep in class (again, made to stand in the back, actually a pretty reasonable solution)
Then I get to my actual operational assignment, with the Jarheads,
03? Doctor? treated like a King,
except for having to hump my Seabag 1000 feet when the Gunny realized we'd all "Pre-positioned" 1000 feet from where we were supposed to be.
Oh, and the time I didn't realize you couldn't just walk around at the MCX wearing a Green USMC T-shirt (did it in Newport with no problemo)
Don't know anyone from the Navy,
keep in touch with a bunch of Jarheads,
Frank "Born in a Bar"
Sounds like an idiotic reason not to recruit someone from a group who were traditionally exceptionally tough fighters. It would be almost like rejecting potential Gurkhas for failing to meet some minimum height requirement.
For Aviators anyway, the minimum (and maximum, not like many Gurkhas need to worry about that one) height requirements are related to ejection seat parameters (too small, you get ejected into orbit, too big, you don't get high enough (love getting high enough) for the chute to deploy properly.
And issues with fitting in cockpits, although they do allow for waivers (remember this FA-18 pilot who had to be 6'10", never understood how he crammed himself into that cockpit, it was tight for me at 5'8")
"It’s crap like this "
Actually it is crap like your short rant that is ruining the country.
You should be grateful that these three men wish to serve.
Military doesn't give a fuck that you "wish to serve" or pretty much anything else about you, it's why you're not a name but a Rank, your family are "dependents" And the papers that tell you where you'll be going are called "Orders" not "Suggestions" And if you get killed, your pay stops (OK, your survivors get your SGLI, if you signed up for it, and if PSAD didn't fuck something up)
Beard and Turban??? Fuck, I'd have grown a Beard, and worn a Turban just not to be stationed in South Carolina,
Frank "Veteran A-hole"
It’s true; individual liberty is bad for the country. We should be more like Russia.
"...individual liberty ...". Obviously you never served.
What does that have to do with what's "ruining the country"?
SNAFU!
"The Marines have landed and completely fucked the situation up beyond all recognition"
I don't understand. They ruled it's ok to make them shave their heads and faces when in combat zones?
Did they fail to argue that basic training is more like combat in that they are constantly undertaking physical activity where long hair and bracelets are a potential risk? Hell my dad has a picture from his Army days where a buddy lost a finger because he was wearing a ring when he shouldn't have been...
For hair, it should be "obvious" to require the same rules for men as for women, but I don't think even women were allowed to have hair of unlimited length until recently. I could be wrong on that. I don't eat crayons.
Don't have to shave but you must design that cake and that website!
Pretty sure if your job was to design websites for the marine corps and you refused to do your job, they would court martial you.
My take on my own boot camp experience (MCRD San Diego, 1985) was that strict uniformity was a big part of how the Corps indoctrinates individuals to become standardized moving parts who instantly, unquestioningly, and energetically act as required (and no, I'm not complaining about that). It goes far beyond the haircut. One of the most important parts of boot camp was close order drill -- marching and moving as an undifferentiated unit.
But, for better or worse, it seems to me that the horse left the barn when the Corps decided on different "uniformity" standards for men and women -- everything from hair to makeup to jewelry to uniform clothing to physical fitness standards.
With respect to religion, even back then recruits could choose from a variety of religious services to attend (or decline to attend if they wanted to spend that time cleaning the squad bay area). So there's already a history of accommodating religious diversity.
I hear the US armed forces have had trouble making their recruitment quotas for years now. And the martial traditions of the Sikh religion would seem to make Sikhs idea recruits. So hey, why not make seemingly minimal accommodations?
Since the RFRA restored pre-Smith law, I think the DC Circuit is bound by Goldman v. Weinberger, the “Yarrmulke case,” in which the Supreme Court said the military has a compelling interest in soldiers’personal appearance, and all but gave the military a pass on religious claims generally; more or less anything the military claims is necessary to being effective in combat is a compelling interest.
Congress’ giving a pass for headgear and certain religious symbols doesn’t, it seems to me, change that.
Whether or not that case was correctly dcided, a circuit court of appeals has no authority to overrule the Supreme Court. Goldman v. Weinberger, correct or not, is part of, and limits, the pre-Smith religious freedom that the RFRA restored.
The fact that general priniciples articulated in recent cases might suggest the court is thinking about broad changes doesn’t give the DC Circuit authority to overrule a Supreme Court case announcing the controlling law on the specific subject at hand.
The military is different under pre-Smith law, and that’s the way it is.
Although RFRA does say that it is intended to restore the pre-Smith legal regime, the operative provisions of the law are much broader than that.
According to some sources, Goldman was overruled by Congress in 1987 with the Religious Apparel Amendment. I'd be interested in hearing your thoughts about that.
Oops, I completely missed that your second paragraph apparently alludes to just that. Too much Bailey's!
I think RFRA was sloppily written precisely because the courts themselves used strict scrutiny sloppily prior to Smith. If RFRA had said strict scrutiny, it could have effectively codified the previous case law. Instead, RFRA says narrowly tailored to a compelling government interest. That's actually stricter than how strict scrutiny was applied in religious freedom cases.