Army Rules Sikh Officer Can Keep His Turban, Beard On Active Duty
A huge step in the right direction.
A Sikh army captain who sued
the U.S. military for discrimination in March has won the right to continue
serving on active duty while upholding his religiously mandated turban and
beard.
The U.S. Army released its decision on Thursday to grant Captain
Simratpal Singh “religious accommodation” to the rules
against facial hair and headwear, adding that “the Army intends to gather
information to develop uniform standards for religious accommodations.”
“My military service continues to fulfill a lifelong dream,” Singh, a West
Point graduate who earned a Bronze Star in Afghanistan, said in a press
release. “My faith, like many of the soldiers I work with, is an integral part
of who I am. I am thankful that I no longer have to make the choice between
faith and service to our nation.”
Courtesy
of the Sikh Coalition After years of cutting his hair and shaving his
face, Captain Simratpal Singh will no longer have to choose between
his faith and his calling.
After years of cutting his hair and shaving his face, Singh was finally granted a temporary accommodation in December. Assistant
Army Secretary Debra Wada ordered
tests in March to determine whether Singh could safely wear a helmet and
gas mask if he had a turban, uncut hair and a beard.
Thursday’s decision by the Army states that Singh will not have to reapply for accommodation in the future.
“In a political context where minorities are being marginalized and attacked
routinely, it is critical that our nation’s largest institutions and employers
— like the U.S. military — show the country that America embraces diversity,”
Simran Jeet Singh, the Senior Religion Fellow for the Sikh Coalition, told
The Huffington Post.
He added, though, that this decision is just one step toward ending the
discriminatory policies regarding article of faith for service members.
In 2014, the U.S. military began
taking steps to give individual troops greater freedom to wear turbans,
head scarfs, yarmulkes and other religious clothing with their uniforms. A
spokesman for the Sikh Coalition noted
at the time that the religious accommodation would have to be approved each
time a service member changed assignments and would default to the discretion
of their commanders.
Just two day’s before the Army released its decision on Singh’s
case, three other Sikh soldiers filed a lawsuit seeking similar accommodations from
the Army. With Singh’s victory and the Army’s promise to “develop uniform
standards,” there may be hope for others in a similar predicament.
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