Abercrombie & Fitch Guilty of Religious  Discrimination, Supreme Court 
Decides in Muslim Head Scarf  Case

 
 
By _Napp Nazworth_ (http://www.christianpost.com/author/napp-nazworth/)   , 
Christian Post Reporter

 
Monday, June 1, 2015
 
The Christian Post received the following statement from Abercrombie &  
Fitch on Monday afternoon following the Supreme Court's ruling: "While the  
Supreme Court reversed the Tenth Circuit decision, it did not determine that  
A&F discriminated against Ms. Elauf. We will determine our next steps in the  
litigation, which the Supreme Court remanded for further consideration. ... 
We  have made significant enhancements to our store associate policies, 
including  the replacement of the 'look policy' with a new dress code that 
allows  associates to be more individualistic; changed our hiring practices to 
not  consider attractiveness ... A&F has a longstanding commitment to 
diversity  and inclusion, and consistent with the law, has granted numerous 
religious  accommodations when requested, including hijabs." 
A Muslim woman who was denied employment because she wears a head scarf won 
a  religious discrimination case against clothing retail chain Abercrombie 
&  Fitch in the U.S. Supreme Court Monday. 
"Thus, the rule for disparate-treatment claims based on a failure to  
accommodate a religious practice is straightforward: An employer may not make 
an  
applicant's religious practice, confirmed or otherwise, a factor in 
employment  decisions," Justice Antonin Scalia wrote for the 8-1 majority.
 
Justice Clarence Thomas was the lone dissenter, agreeing in part and  
dissenting in part. Justice Samuel Alito wrote a separate concurring  opinion. 
The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission sued Abercrombie after the  
company declined to hire Samantha Elauf, a devout Muslim who wore a hijab, or  
head scarf, as part of her religious practice, to the interview. 
Abercrombie violated _Title VII of the Civil Rights Act_ 
(http://www.eeoc.gov/laws/statutes/titlevii.cfm) , which prohibits employment  
discrimination 
based upon religious belief and practice, the court decided. 
An employer is guilty of religious discrimination in hiring, Scalia wrote, 
if  it refuses to hire in order to avoid having to provide a religious  
accommodation. 
"For example, suppose that an employer thinks (though he does not know for  
certain) that a job applicant may be an orthodox Jew who will observe the  
Sabbath, and thus be unable to work on Saturdays. If the applicant actually  
requires an accommodation of that religious practice, and the employer's 
desire  to avoid the prospective accommodation is a motivating factor in his 
decision,  the employer violates Title VII," he wrote.  
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Scalia also made a point of clarifying that the religious freedoms 
protected  by Title VII includes both the freedom to believe and the freedom to 
live 
 according to those beliefs. 
Since Congress defined religious as both belief and practice for the 
purposes  of Title VII, he wrote, "religious practice is one of the protected  
characteristics that cannot be accorded disparate treatment and must be  
accommodated." 
A broad coalition of supporters, including Christian, Jewish, and LGBT  
advocacy groups supported Elauf in her case. 
In a February interview with The Christian Post on the day of the oral  
arguments, Eric Baxter of the Becket Fund for Religious Liberty, who attended  
the oral arguments, _was optimistic that the EEOC would win_ 
(http://www.christianpost.com/news/christian-gay-rights-and-jewish-groups-help-muslim-in-hea
d-scarf-case-against-abercrombie-fitch-win-likely-after-supreme-court-oral-a
rguments-134751/) . 
Abercrombie never denied that Elauf was not hired because of her head 
scarf.  Instead, the company argued she should not win a religious freedom 
complaint  because she never stated in the interview that she was wearing the 
head 
scarf  for religious reasons. This argument was absurd, one of the justices 
pointed  out, because if the company denied employment because of the head 
scarf, it  would be because they assumed she would be wearing it daily as 
part of her  religious practice. 
In his concurring opinion, Alito argued that if an employer is, quoting 
Title  VII, "unable to reasonably accommodate to [the] employee's or 
prospective  employee's religious ... practice ... without undue hardship on 
the 
conduct of  the employer's business," then the burden of proof for undue 
hardship 
is on the  employer, not the employee or prospective employee. 
"Thus, a plaintiff need not plead or prove that the employer wished to 
avoid  making an accommodation or could have done so without undue hardship. If 
a  plaintiff shows that the employer took an adverse employment action 
because of a  religious observance or practice, it is then up to the employer 
to 
plead and  prove the defense," he wrote. 
In his dissent, Thomas argued that Abercrombie cannot be guilty of  
intentional discrimination because the company's "look policy" applies to all  
employees, not just Muslims. 
"Unlike the majority, I adhere to what I had thought before today was an  
undisputed proposition: Mere application of a neutral policy cannot 
constitute  'intentional discrimination,'" he wrote. 
The case shared some similarities with another recent Supreme Court 
decision.  The _Court unanimously ruled in January_ 
(http://www.christianpost.com/news/supreme-court-unanimously-sides-with-religious-freedom-advocates-in-musli
m-beard-case-132829/)  that an Arkansas  prison violated a Muslim inmate's 
religious practice when it would not allow him  to grow a beard.

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