IRS Kirpan Case in Court -
Is a Small Kirpan More Dangerous Than a Large Cake Knife?
Posted: 15 Feb 2013
:Last week the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals heard a major case concerning the clash between religious liberty and federal security policies. The case concerns Kawaljeet Kaur Tagore, an IRS accountant who was fired in July 2006 because she wore a kirpan to work after she received Amrit, the Sikh baptism. The kirpan is a Sikh article of faith that many mistake for a weapon. Baptized Sikhs must wear the kirpan and 4 other articles at all times as if they are a body part.
The kirpan is traditionally worn in a curved sheath and acts as a reminder of a Sikh’s duty to protect the weak and promote justice for all Fired for Her Religion An arm of the Department of Homeland Security, the Federal Protective Service (FPS) is charged with protecting all Federal buildings. There are cases all over the United States of FPS not allowing Sikhs into Post Offices or Passport Offices.
FPS stated that Kawaljeet could not enter the federal building in downtown
Kawaljeet Kaur's kirpan was small, yet the FPS allows all kinds of far sharper knives into the
Implying Previous Wrongdoing In the run-up to their day in court, Federal agencies revealed a new policy that had apparently been in the works for months: not only will there be no categorical ban on religious items like Kawaljeet's kirpan, but FPS also has to make an extra effort to allow in religious items that pose no danger to federal buildings. This new policy was embodied in a FPS Directive that went into effect last year but was kept under seal at the government’s request until days ago. The policy contains specific provisions to deal with Sikh religious objects, but it is designed to accommodate all religious groups who do not want to give up their religious identity when they walk through the door of a federal building.
In short, Kawaljeet Kaur--whose lawsuit surely led to the issuance of the Directive--has already won a major victory for the religious freedom of not just Sikh-Americans, but believers of all faiths. The Fifth Circuit appeal was argued by Scott Newar, a prominent
The Long Road to Justice The original case was supported by the Sikh Coalition and filed in January 2009. At the time, Harsimran Kaur, the Sikh Coalition's Legal Director said, "Sikhs should be entitled to work for their government, just like other Americans. In this case, the government put Ms. Tagore in the unacceptable position of choosing between her religion and her job." The lawsuit claimed that the government's conduct violated both the Religious Freedom Restoration Act of 1993 (RFRA) and Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. It alleges that the FPS and IRS banned the kirpan as a so-called "dangerous weapon," even though the government allows hundreds of sharp knives and box cutters in the
The Becket Fund for Religious Liberty of Washington, DC and
Other Sikh and religious groups joined in on behalf of Kawaljeet Kaur leading to the hearing on February 10th. Kirpans on the Job "Sikhs around the world wear their kirpans while serving as government officials. Bureaucratic short-sightedness and ignorance of the Sikh religion are no reason to put a unique ban on kirpans in
In October of 2007, AT&T Inc. in