Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Yale respects the traditional values of Muslims but not Jews

A tale of two policies: The religious rights denied to Jews by Yale in 1998 have now been granted to Muslims in 2023.

Yale University Law School, Sterling Law Building
Yale University Law School in New Haven, Conn. Credit: Juan Paulo Gutierrez/Flickr via Wikimedia Commons.
Nathan Lewin is a Washington D.C. attorney who has argued 28 cases in the U.S. Supreme Court and served on the adjunct faculties of leading national law schools.

Congratulations are owed to Yale for its dean of students’ decision to provide single-gender housing options to students beginning with the 2023-24 school year. News reports say that this decision followed “weeks of demands” from Muslim students who were being “forced to change their habits to avoid sacrificing their religious beliefs.”

“Mandatory mixed-gender bathrooms directly interfere with students’ rights to their religious practices,” said an open letter signed by advocates of single-gender housing, including the Muslim Students Association and the Black Muslim Students Association.

In fact, it took a quarter-century for Yale to acknowledge that forcing its students to live on campus in mixed-gender housing is a violation of the basic American value of religious liberty.

In 1998, I filed a federal lawsuit on behalf of four Orthodox Jewish freshmen and sophomores at Yale College that made an identical claim regarding religious liberty. Yale fought us tooth and nail. It opposed the Orthodox Jewish students’ request in meetings we had with administrators and then in the federal district and appellate courts. Yale claimed, “It would defeat the purpose of the residential-college system if students could opt out of it.”

Jewish appellate judges ruled against us. The only judge sympathetic to the Orthodox Jewish claim was James B. Moran, a visiting federal judge from Illinois. In an opinion dissenting from a dismissal of our case, he said that a trial was needed to decide “whether [Yale’s] policy had a discriminatory effect on Orthodox Jews” and “whether the mandatory on-campus policy is reasonably necessary to achieve an important business objective of Yale College.”

The religious rights denied to Jews by Yale in 1998 have now been granted to Muslims in 2023. This may reflect Yale’s greater tolerance of minority religious practices. Or it may reflect a difference in American institutions’ willingness to accommodate Muslims, in contrast to their attitude towards Orthodox Jews.

Our claim against Yale was criticized at the time by some American Jewish secular organizations and spokesmen. It was, they asserted, harmful to the standing of American Jewry in contemporary society.

Maybe if America’s Jews had been as united in seeking recognition of traditional Jewish values—as America’s Muslims are united today in regard to their values—the result of our lawsuit would have been different.

Nathan Lewin is a Washington, D.C. lawyer with a Supreme Court practice who has taught at leading national law schools.

“When journalists make these requests, they’re really made on behalf of the public, not to bury the issue and respond 11 months later,” Randy Mastro, a former deputy New York City mayor, told JNS.
“We can confirm that a final, agreed-upon text of the peace deal has been reached and Pakistan is now working closely with both sides to finalize the next steps,” Shehbaz Sharif wrote. “Peace has never been this close as it is now.”
The Israeli prime minster said he and Trump are “in full agreement” as reports from Tehran claim Iran will not agree to halt uranium enrichment.
NGOs abused the system to carry out political advocacy, and even justify cooperation with terrorists.
Rabbi Raphi Steiner told JNS that he worries that his son is growing up in an environment “wondering why some hater decided it would be a good idea to write on his shul that Jews don’t belong here.”
“Based on the fact that discussions with the Islamic Republican of Iran have been brought to the highest level of Iranian leadership and approved, I have, as president of the United States of America, canceled the scheduled strikes and bombings against Iran this evening,” the president said.