The Maui News

Jehovah’s Witnesses suit protects rights of everyone

-

While Jehovah’s Witnesses have chosen to temporaril­y suspend their door-to-door ministry due to the pandemic, their activity was almost permanentl­y banned by one U.S. village in the late 1990s — that is until the United States Supreme Court stepped in with a historic 8-1 decision on June 17, 2002, declaring the local ordinance unconstitu­tional.

Constituti­onal scholars marvel at the outsized impact the decision has had on the protection of free speech for all, agreeing with Justice Antonin Scalia’s opinion in the case, “The free-speech claim exempts everybody.”

The 2002 Supreme Court decision in Watchtower v. Village of Stratton, affirmed that a local village ordinance in Stratton, Ohio, requiring a permit to knock on doors violated the rights of any person who wanted to engage in free speech.

The court overturned two lower court rulings that upheld the ordinance, and thus paved the way for all citizens to maintain open dialogue with their neighbors.

The village of Stratton became a center of controvers­y in 1998 after the mayor personally confronted four Jehovah’s Witnesses as they were driving out of town after visiting a resident.

Subsequent­ly, an ordinance passed which required anyone wishing to engage in door-to-door activity to obtain a permit from the mayor or face imprisonme­nt. Jehovah’s Witnesses viewed this ordinance as an infringeme­nt of freedom of speech, religion and press.

This victory is one of more than 250 rulings in cases brought by Jehovah’s Witnesses in high courts around the world that have expanded the rights of people of all religious faiths.

Joshua K.W. Sado

Wailuku

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States