The Jerusalem Post

Trump initiative removes barrier to proselytiz­ing, worries some Jews

- • By RON KAMPEAS

WASHINGTON ( JTA) – Flanked by clergy – including a priest, an imam and an Orthodox rabbi – President Donald Trump revived the White House Office of FaithBased and Community Initiative­s, a system that since its 2001 launch has delivered humanitari­an assistance to Americans through religious organizati­ons.

“Americans of faith have built the hospitals that care for our sick, the homes that tend to our elderly and the charities that house the orphaned. And they minister... they really do, they minister to the poor and so beautifull­y and with such love,” Trump said in remarks Thursday in the Rose Garden.

Buried in legal speak in the executive order, however, was a clause that left liberal-leaning Jewish groups aghast: Trump removed a section that required religious groups using government money to refer applicants to appropriat­e alternativ­es if the applicant did not want a dose of salvation with their relief.

Marc Stern, the attorney for the American Jewish Committee, said the now-moot requiremen­t protected starving people from having to listen to a sermon before entering a soup kitchen for a meal.

“It’s always been thought that the provision of an alternativ­e is an essential element of preserving religious liberty,” Stern said in an interview. “Dropping it is more than a step backward. Forced sermons remind us [Jews] of efforts at various times to make us listen to conversion­ary sermons.”

Orthodox groups welcomed the re-establishm­ent of the faith-based initiative office and Trump’s expansion of its ambit to the entire executive branch. But groups that lobbied hard for the protection under past administra­tions were quick to object.

The order “puts America’s most vulnerable citizens at risk of choosing between accessing essential, taxpayer-funded social services and being subject to unwanted proselytiz­ing or religious activity,” the Anti-Defamation League said in a statement.

“Any White House faith-based initiative must uphold and enhance constituti­onal protection­s for the separation of church and state and protect the rights of all people, regardless of their faith,” the Reform movement’s Religious Action Center said.

Conservati­ve religious groups were pleased by the executive order, not only because it reopens an office that has been moribund since Trump assumed office in 2017, but because it expands the scope of the office.

The office steers funding to faith-based groups to carry out humanitari­an interventi­ons, including delivering food to the needy and administer­ing addiction rehabilita­tion programs. Trump will expand its reach to all government agencies.

President George W. Bush launched the office in 2001 and Barack Obama – to the surprise of some – maintained it, but launched a lengthy review process to make sure it operated within constituti­onal church-state separation­s.

Conservati­ve religious groups have chafed at the Obama-imposed restrictio­ns, saying they inhibited productive partnershi­ps with proven relief providers. Michelle Boorstein, religion correspond­ent for The Washington Post, tweeted a quote from an unnamed Trump administra­tion official saying the idea behind this week’s order was to launch programs “without all of these arbitrary concerns as to what is appropriat­e.”

That outraged Jack Moline, a Conservati­ve movement rabbi who is the president of the Interfaith Alliance, a liberal-leaning umbrella group.

“President Trump and his staff would do well to remember that we are a nation of laws, not prayers, and that there is nothing arbitrary in respecting the First Amendment,” he said in an emailed statement linked to Boorstein’s tweet.

In a Religion News Service column, Mark Silk, who heads the Leonard E. Greenberg Center for the Study of Religion in Public Life at Trinity College in Connecticu­t, said, “Where Obama ensured religious freedom, Trump creates religious establishm­ents.” IT PROBABLY didn’t help that Trump, in extemporiz­ed remarks at the signing, goaded church-state separation­ists, saying that the use of the phrase “Merry Christmas” had increased since he assumed office. He provided no evidence for his claim.

“We’re starting to say ‘Merry Christmas’ when that day comes around,” the president said to applause. “You notice the big difference between now and two or three years ago?”

Agudath Israel of America, an Orthodox umbrella group, welcomed Trump’s order. Rabbi Abba Cohen, Agudath’s Washington director, said in an email, “With or without the executive order provision, we believe that the First Amendment has no tolerance for ‘forced’ proselytiz­ation, and that is why we have always supported referrals.” He suggested, however, that this might be an opportunit­y to rethink whether the faithbased provider or the government should be the one responsibl­e for the referrals.

“Federal or local offices are often better situated, have more resources and less limitation­s than faith-based providers have in regard to finding accommodat­ions for objectors,” said Cohen, who also attended the signing ceremony. “If a faith-based provider is able and willing to help with a referral, as they generally have been, that’s fine. But being mandated to do this is not beneficial when it is taking their energies away when they would be better utilized in providing actual services.”

Other Orthodox groups, while supporting the overall order and the expansion of the office, were also less-than-sanguine about the removal of the requiremen­t for referrals.

“I certainly would have preferred that provision not be eliminated in the new executive order,” Nathan Diament, the Washington director for the Orthodox Union, said in an email. “That said, other critical protection­s we developed and were adopted in the Obama executive order remain in place – the most important of which are that the faith-based entity receiving a government grant may not use the grant funds for its religious activities and that those religious activities must take place at a separate time and in a separate location from the government-funded activities.”

The Orthodox Union, like Agudath Israel, praised Trump’s order. Diament, in a statement noting that he attended the signing ceremony, said the notion of faith-based collaborat­ion spanned Republican and Democratic administra­tions.

“This bipartisan continuity is an important statement of principle and rebuttal to those who would seek to have government policy discrimina­te against faith-based entities,” he said.

Rabbi Levi Shemtov, the executive vice president of Friends of Lubavitch (Chabad), who delivered a prayer at the signing, said he would raise the removal of the protection with the administra­tion.

“Any time somebody doesn’t feel comfortabl­e religiousl­y in the context of humanitari­an assistance it’s a cause for concern and review, and I definitely intend to be in touch with the administra­tion as appropriat­e to learn what implicatio­ns this might have,” he said. “At the same time, I would doubt that a religious institutio­n offering humanitari­an help would be crass in this regard if the person needing this help objected.”

Stern, of the American Jewish Committee, said the issue was not a question of having to accept an institutio­n’s religious beliefs, but being forced to listen to them in the first place. He predicted that a civil-rights group would soon challenge the order with a lawsuit.

For Shemtov, the mere opportunit­y to deliver a blessing at the White House for an office that extends government cooperatio­n to all religions was a cause for celebratio­n.

“As a Jew, so mindful of my forebears and their tribulatio­ns, I am deeply grateful to the president for this invitation and for the opportunit­y this gives me to publicly offer this prayer freely from my heart and according to my own faith,” he said at the White House.

Shemtov explained later in an interview that his grandfathe­r and great-grandfathe­r had been jailed by the KGB in the former Soviet Union.

 ?? (Leah Millis/Reuters) ?? US PRESIDENT Donald Trump signs an ‘Establishm­ent of a White House Faith and Opportunit­y Initiative’ proclamati­on after the National Day of Prayer ceremony at the White House earlier this month.
(Leah Millis/Reuters) US PRESIDENT Donald Trump signs an ‘Establishm­ent of a White House Faith and Opportunit­y Initiative’ proclamati­on after the National Day of Prayer ceremony at the White House earlier this month.

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