NJ’s $10.6M grant to Lakewood yeshiva unconstitutional, court rules
Published May 26, 2016
(JTA) — A New Jersey court has ruled that state grants to two religious institutions — including $10.6 million to one of North America’s largest haredi Orthodox yeshivas — are unconstitutional.
The two grants, announced in 2013 by Gov. Chris Christie’s administration as part of a $1.3 billion funding package allocated among 46 educational institutions in the state, were struck down by a New Jersey appellate court on Thursday, the Asbury Park Press reported.
The $10.6 million grant to Beth Medrash Govoha in Lakewood, a city known for its large haredi Orthodox community, was supposed to help fund construction of a new library. The other institution, a Presbyterian seminary,was to receive $645,323. The grants have not been paid yet.
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“This is a victory for civil rights and a victory for New Jersey taxpayers, who should never have to subsidize institutions that discriminate or that exist to teach their particular religious doctrine,” Edward Barocas, the legal director of the American Civil Liberties Union’s New Jersey office, said in a statement, according to the Asbury Park Press.
The ACLU and Americans United for Separation of Church and State filed a complaint in state Superior Court in 2013 to stop the grants. The complaint was later moved to a state appellate court.
In its unanimous decision, the three-judge court panel wrote, according to the Star-Ledger: “Here, unlike other broad-based liberal arts colleges that received grants, both the yeshiva and the seminary are sectarian institutions. Their facilities funded by the department’s grants indisputably will be used subsequently, if not exclusively, for religious instruction.”
New Jersey’s attorney general defended the grant in court, arguing that the grants should be allowed because they paid for secular, rather than religious, activities.
The ACLU’s Barocas told the Asbury Park Press in April: “At a time when public school funding has been slashed in our state, it’s an insult for more than $11 million to go toward private, sectarian, religious institutions that actively exclude students based on religion or gender.” April.
Beth Medrash Govoha, which has more than 6,500 students, enrolls only men and offers courses in Judaic studies only.
Officials with the yeshiva did not respond to the Asbury Park Press’ request for comment.