Sunday, December 21, 2025
ADVT 
International

Sikh Student Can Join US Army With Beard, Turban, Rules Washington Court

Darpan News Desk IANS, 17 Jun, 2015 01:05 PM
    A Sikh college student will be able to join the US Army, without being forced to cut his hair, shave his beard or stop wearing his turban thanks to a Washington court ruling.
     
    District Court Judge Amy Berman Jackson ruled last week that the Army violated Hofstra University student Iknoor Singh's rights when it refused to let him compete for a spot as a contracted member of his college's Reserve Officer Training Corps programme.
     
    "The court finds that defendants have failed to show that the application of the Army's regulations to this plaintiff and the denial of the particular religious accommodation he seeks further a compelling government interest by the least restrictive means," the judge wrote.
     
    She added that the Army's refusal to permit Singh to enrol while adhering to "articles of faith" that include his hair and turban "cannot survive the strict scrutiny" of the federal law.
     
    The Army has given "tens of thousands of exceptions" to its grooming and uniform policies, the judge wrote, and made "successful accommodation of observant Sikhs in the past," noting several who have served with distinction, receiving commendations.
     
    Jackson said the Army's own research contradicted deputy chief of staff Lt. Gen. James C. McConville's opinion in denying Singh's enrolment request.
     
    McConville and other Army officials had contended the articles of faith would have an adverse impact on unit cohesion and morale, discipline and health and safety.
     
     
    Singh, a resident of Queens in New York, who plans to enrol in the ROTC programme in autumn, told Newsday in a phone interview Monday: "Being told no a handful of times, I didn't give up."
     
    "I had faith and let things play out," he was quoted as saying. "I'll be going on weekend field exercises, which I wasn't previously able to do. I'm very excited about that."
     
    The American Civil Liberties Union and advocacy group United Sikhs filed the lawsuit in November, saying the Army's denial violated the Religious Freedom Restoration Act, which gives protections for religious-based exercises.
     
    Army spokeswoman Cynthia O. Smith said in a statement: "The Army is currently examining the court's ruling. The Army takes pride in sustaining a culture where all personnel are treated with dignity and respect and not discriminated against based on race, colour, religion, gender and national origin."
     
    The Army last year rejected Singh's request to enrol in the ROTC programme, saying the student had to comply with the service's grooming and uniform policies before they would consider his request, according to the judge's ruling.
     
    Hofstra, in a statement, said it supports "Singh's desire to serve his country, as well as his right to religious expression and practice. We are pleased that the courts have affirmed that he can do both as a member of the ROTC."

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Record gun sales in US on Black Friday

    Record gun sales in US on Black Friday
    Gun sales in the US on Black Friday this year set a new record for that day, during which the FBI carried out 175,000 background checks, a media report said Tuesday....

    Record gun sales in US on Black Friday

    Children drugged, tortured at Indian ashram in Australia

    Children drugged, tortured at Indian ashram in Australia
    A public hearing here has revealed shocking details of cases of sex abuse in Australia by an Indian yoga guru, who died around 17 years...

    Children drugged, tortured at Indian ashram in Australia

    Bin Laden family-owned group to build Africa's highest tower

    Bin Laden family-owned group to build Africa's highest tower
     A construction group owned by the family of Osama bin Laden is to build a 514-metre high tower in Casablanca, the economic capital of Morocco that will be the tallest....

    Bin Laden family-owned group to build Africa's highest tower

    Sikh Woman elected city council member in US

    Sikh Woman elected city council member in US
    A Sikh woman in the US was elected a city council member, first woman from the community to hold the post not just in California state, but in the country, media reported....

    Sikh Woman elected city council member in US

    Members Of Banned Kurdish Group In Canada: US

    Members Of Banned Kurdish Group In Canada: US
    WASHINGTON - Two members of a listed terrorist organization whose case caused controversy in the United States have now wound up in Canada, the U.S. Homeland Security secretary announced Tuesday.

    Members Of Banned Kurdish Group In Canada: US

    Yoga Ashram Master 'Beat And Groomed Young Girls For Sex' In Australia

    Yoga Ashram Master 'Beat And Groomed Young Girls For Sex' In Australia

    The Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse in Australia held a publi...

    Yoga Ashram Master 'Beat And Groomed Young Girls For Sex' In Australia