Yeshiva University has taken a strikingly ambitious nonstop express route to the U.S. Supreme Court. Lynn Kotler, a New York trial judge, ruled that Yeshiva is obliged by the State’s public accommodations anti-discrimination law to give official student-club status to YU Pride Alliance, a student LGBTQ club.

The club’s program indisputably conflicts with traditional Jewish attitudes on gender relations. Yeshiva argued in the state court that the New York law is inapplicable and that if the law were to apply, compelling Yeshiva to violate its religious principles breaches the constitutional protection for the free exercise of religion. The judge ordered that Yeshiva immediately grant the student group official status. Neither she nor any appeals judge in the New York judicial hierarchy accorded Yeshiva’s legal position enough respect to follow customary procedure in cases raising difficult legal and constitutional questions by delaying implementation while the case is winding its way through the appeals process. So Yeshiva raced to the Supreme Court of the United States.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here