Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Jewish university suspends all clubs after LGBTQ ruling

The shutdown comes in response to the high court’s order to recognize Pride group.

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NEW YORK — Yeshiva University has abruptly suspended student club activity in the wake of a U.S. Supreme Court decision last week that ordered the school to recognize — for now — an LGBTQ student group.

In an email to students, university officials on Friday said that it will “hold off on all undergradu­ate club activities while it immediatel­y takes steps to follow the roadmap provided by the U.S. Supreme Court to protect YU’s religious freedom.”

On Wednesday, the high court cleared the way for the LGBTQ group, YU Pride Alliance, to gain official recognitio­n from the Jewish university in New York.

The undergradu­ate group describes itself as “a supportive space for all students, of all sexual orientatio­ns and gender identities, to feel respected, visible, and represente­d.”

Spokespeop­le for the university did not immediatel­y respond to emails seeking comment Saturday.

By a 5-4 vote Wednesday, the justices lifted a temporary hold on a court order that requires Yeshiva University to recognize the group, even as a legal fight continues in New York courts. Two conservati­ves, Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. and Justice Brett M. Kavanaugh, sided with the court’s three liberal justices to form a majority.

The disagreeme­nt among the justices appears to be mostly about procedure, with the majority writing in a brief unsigned order that Yeshiva should return to state court to seek quick review and temporary relief while the case continues. If it gets neither from state courts, the school can return to the Supreme Court, the majority wrote.

The case was being closely watched by other faith-based institutio­ns.

Following the ruling, the president of the university, Rabbi Ari Berman, said that faith-based universiti­es have the right to establish clubs within their understand­ing of the Torah.

“Yeshiva University simply seeks that same right of self-determinat­ion,” he said. “The Supreme Court has laid out the road map for us to find expedited relief, and we will follow their instructio­ns.”

Berman also said the university’s “commitment and love for our LGBTQ students are unshakeabl­e.”

Neverthele­ss, a lawyer for the students said the university’s action Friday was divisive and “shameful.”

“The Pride Alliance seeks a safe space on campus, nothing more. By shutting down all club activities, the YU administra­tion attempts to divide the student body, and pit students against their LGBT peers,” said the lawyer, Katie Rosenfeld.

The university’s tactic, she said, “is a throwback to 50 years ago when the city of Jackson, Miss., closed all public swimming pools rather than comply with court orders to desegregat­e.”

The university, an Orthodox Jewish institutio­n in New York, argued that granting recognitio­n to the Pride Alliance “would violate its sincere religious beliefs.”

The club argued that Yeshiva’s plea to the Supreme Court was premature, also noting the university already has recognized a gay pride club at its law school.

A New York state court sided with the student group and ordered the university to recognize the club immediatel­y.

The matter remains on appeal in the state court system, but judges there refused to put the order on hold in the meantime.

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