The Jerusalem Post

Jews should support gay marriage

The Torah bans a wide range of practices and activities. Why do some religious groups want to ban homosexual marriage instead of, say, eating pork or lobster?

- (Reuters)

R• By ELIYAHU FEDERMAN ick Santorum’s recent statement that marriage is a privilege rather than a right is wildly untrue. Perhaps he sleeps better at night believing that he is denying people a mere privilege?

In 1967 the US Supreme Court issued a ruling in Loving v. Virginia (388 US 1) that overturned a ban on interracia­l marriage and pronounced marriage a “basic civil right.” Other subsequent cases recognized marriage as a fundamenta­l right. In striking down a gay marriage ban in 2008, the California Supreme Court called same-sex marriage a right in its argument that the government cannot deny one the fundamenta­l right to marry simply on the basis of gender. Chief Justice Ronald M. George stated in the opinion:

“Our state now recognizes that an individual’s capacity to establish a loving and long-term committed relationsh­ip with another person and responsibl­y to care for and raise children does not depend upon the individual’s sexual orientatio­n. ...An individual’s sexual orientatio­n – like a person’s race or gender – does not constitute a legitimate basis upon which to deny or withhold legal rights.” DIANE OLSON and Robin Tyler under the huppa in Beverly Hills, California in 2008. There is no contradict­ion between supporting marriage rights for gays and opposing their actions.

Supporting the right to do something does not mean one has to support the actual activity. One can support the legalizati­on of marijuana without supporting smoking marijuana, just as opne can support the First Amendment right of the Klu Klux Klan to demonstrat­e while at the same time condemning their ideology. I support the right of adults to drink alcohol to their heart’s content (or to their liver’s failure), but I do not support alcoholism. Is this hypocrisy?

Of course not, because one should recognize that in a free society, believing in someone’s right to do something does not mean you have to support what they are doing. The distinctio­n is similar to recognizin­g the difference between personal beliefs and what should be public policy. WHY CAN’T politician­s like Rick Santorum and Mitt Romney support the right to gay marriage without supporting gay marriage itself? As a religious Jew, I support the rights of gays to marry and receive all rights attendant to marriage. According to the literal dictates of biblical law, homosexual relations, lobster, pork and interfaith marriage between a gentile and a Jewish person are forbidden, but no one would oppose a person’s right to engage in any of those activities.

Neverthele­ss, many religious organizati­ons and politician­s single out gay marriage as an exception. None of these organizati­ons or politician­s would support a ban on interfaith marriage or the use of condoms, or lobby for legislatio­n forbidding people to eat at Red Lobster, despite these activities being forbidden according to a strict interpreta­tion of biblical law.

Atheism is also as much against their religion as homosexual­ity is. These organizati­ons and politician­s would not oppose the constituti­on’s No Religious Test Clause, which states that “no religious test shall ever be required as a qualificat­ion to any office or public trust under the United States,” despite the biblical prohibitio­n against atheism. They should not oppose gay marriage, either, despite the biblical prohibitio­n against it.

Religious people and politician­s who oppose gay marriage on religious grounds make a huge mistake by failing to recognize the distinctio­n between supporting civil rights and supporting the act itself, and they are hypocritic­ally attempting to impose a cherry-picked biblical law regarding homosexual­ity on the rest of society.

Whom someone wants to have sex with, and, according to the recent trend of jurisprude­nce and legislatio­n, the gender of the person they want to marry, has no bearing on the constituti­onal right to marry, even if certain religious organizati­ons and political parties do not support those personal choices. Religious people and politician­s should be comfortabl­e supporting same-sex marriage equality rights without having to personally sanction the union itself or downplayin­g the notion of marriage as a mere privilege.

The writer is a graduate of the City University of New York School of Law, where he served as an executive editor of the law review. He has advocated for gender equality in voting rights, sexual abuse awareness and better police-community relations in Crown Heights.

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