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Plaintiffs say Air Force recruiters told to use religion as tool
Patrick O'Driscoll, USA TODAY
March 9, 2006
Michael
"Mikey" Weinstein, a 1977 graduate of the Air Force Academy, filed suit
against the Air Force in federal court in Albuquerque last October.
Weinstein and four other plaintiffs allege illegal proselytizing by
evangelical Christian chaplains, officers and cadets at the Air Force
Academy and throughout the service.
The plaintiffs — including one of Weinstein's sons who is an Air
Force officer — filed a motion Thursday to amend the lawsuit,
challenging the Air Force's "interim guidelines" on religious
expression issued last month.
The latest filing seeks to add another plaintiff, Master Sgt. Phillip
Burleigh of Alamogordo, N.M., a 24-year veteran. It alleges that
Burleigh, an Air Force Reserve recruiter at Holloman Air Force Base,
"has been subjected to regular and persistent proselytizing by his
superior officers" against his will and "in violation of his
constitutional rights."
Burleigh could not be reached for comment. The filing says his problems
began in 1997 with "aggressive proselytizing" by his supervisor and
lower performance ratings than colleagues who attended prayer groups
and church.
Pentagon spokeswoman Jean Schaefer wouldn't comment on the filing, but
said the Air Force is "committed to having an environment for everyone
to practice or not practice their faith."
The 12-page court filing says guest speakers at conventions of Air
Force recruiters in 2003 and 2005 told Burleigh and other recruiters
that "they needed to accept Jesus Christ in order to perform their job
duties" and "to use faith in Jesus Christ while recruiting."
"It's absolutely horrifying that the Air Force has been trying to force
its recruiters to use the gospel of Jesus Christ as a recruiting tool,"
said Weinstein, who is Jewish. "There's no wall left between church and
state in the Air Force."
Weinstein took on the military last year after a Pentagon task force
cleared the Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs of "overt religious
discrimination" but noted insensitivity toward cadets of non-Christian
faiths. Weinstein has a second son who is a cadet there.
Complaints of religious intolerance, conversion attempts and favoritism
for "born again" Christian cadets had first surfaced in a 2004 campus
survey and in criticism in a Yale Divinity School study of chaplain
practices at the academy.
The controversy led the Air Force to issue four-page guidelines last
August for "free exercise of religion" throughout the service. It also
instituted religious sensitivity training for the academy's cadets and
staff.
Members of Congress and some Christian groups objected that the
guidelines were too restrictive. They said the rules violated
constitutional guarantees of free exercise of religion and
discriminated against evangelicals, who consider spreading their faith
a requirement of Christianity.
A national petition drive and a congressional letter to President Bush
sought guarantees that chaplains could pray at military gatherings "in
Jesus' name," not just with non-sectarian words.
In February, the Pentagon shortened the guidelines to one page and
eased some restrictions on chaplains. Evangelical groups praised the
change as restoring freedom of religion for believers.
Critics, including Weinstein and Americans United for Separation of
Church and State, said the revision doesn't give non-believers freedom
from religion.
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