Inmates suing to see solar eclipse
New York inmates are suing the state over its plan to lock down prisons during the impending solar eclipse, alleging that in barring them from viewing the rare phenomenon, the corrections department is stripping them of their constitutional right to exercise their religion.
The six plaintiffs in the class-action suit, who are Christian, Muslim, Santerian and atheist, are asking a judge to allow them to see the celestial event, arguing it has religious significance. Some said it was critical to their practice of their faith – because the Bible describes the sun going dark during the crucifixion of Jesus Christ; because Muslims perform a special prayer upon the eclipse; and because it is important in the Santeria faith to make a spiritual offering.
“Watching the eclipse with the people I know here is a way for me to feel closer to God,” wrote Travis Hudson in a statement for the lawsuit, which was filed in a New York federal court against the top leaders of the New York Department of Corrections and Community Supervision (DOCCS).
The total solar eclipse, the second in the United States in seven years and the first one in New York in nearly a century, has caused a flurry of excitement nationwide. More than 31 million Americans will be able to see the eclipse outside their homes, as the air suddenly cools, birds fall silent and nocturnal animals begin to stir. Millions more plan to travel to see it first-hand, fuelling a small spending boom and a potential path of gridlock across the country.
Those incarcerated at the Woodbourne Correctional Facility in New York say they should be allowed to view it too. They filed the suit on Saturday, after DOCCS acting commissioner Daniel F Martuscello III last month announced plans to lock prisoners in their units from 2pm to 5pm on April 8 and prohibit them from watching the eclipse in the yard, citing safety concerns.
Madeline Byrd, one of the lawyers representing the inmates, said: “This historic eclipse is religiously significant to people of many different faiths, and we are fighting for everyone’s right to observe it.”
DOCCS spokesperson Thomas Mailey said the ban was for the safety of the prison population. The department will provide safety glasses for its staff and inmates in case they can “view the eclipse from their assigned work location or housing units”.
The court case could be resolved as early as tomorrow, Byrd said. – The Washington Post