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Date: 26th March
2005
Muslim Sues Over Prison Visit,
Headscarf
By RYAN J. FOLEY, Associated Press Writer
Thursday, May 26, 2005
(05-26) 05:52 PDT Madison, Wis. (AP) --
A Muslim woman who was ordered by male prison guards to take off her
headscarf before she could visit an inmate filed a federal lawsuit
Wednesday alleging her constitutional right to practice religion had
been violated.
Cynthia Rhouni, 43, of Madison, says the scarf, or hijab, that
always covers her head and shoulders in the presence of men shows
the world she is a devout Muslim.
Rhouni's lawsuit claims that male prison guards at the
maximum-security Columbia Correctional Facility north of Madison
told her rules prohibited any head covering in the visiting room.
They ordered her to take off her scarf before she could see her
estranged husband in 2003, the suit alleges.
She protested, but eventually took the scarf off and went inside so
her son could speak with his father. Several male prisoners were
able to see her scarfless and her estranged husband and teenage son
were upset.
"I just felt totally naked," Rhouni said Wednesday. "I felt I
disgraced my family and my religion."
The lawsuit was filed in U.S. District Court in Madison against two
guards and the state Department of Corrections. It seeks unspecified
damages that could amount to more than $1 million, said Rhouni's
lawyer, David Lasker.
It also seeks to bars Wisconsin prisons from making Muslim women
remove their headscarves. "The law is clear: you must accommodate
people's practice of their own religion," Lasker said.
John Dipko, a spokesman for the Department of Corrections, said the
agency had not seen the lawsuit and that he was unaware of the
department's policy on religious head coverings. Columbia Warden
Greg Grams did not return a phone message Wednesday.
The American Civil Liberties Union of Wisconsin is funding the
lawsuit.
Source:
Janesville
Gazette, WI |