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Title: Muslim Workers at Nebraska Meatpacking Plant Complain of Religious Harassment
Source: FOXNews.com
URL Source: http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,290324,00.html
Published: Jul 22, 2007
Author: staff
Post Date: 2007-07-22 20:19:36 by JCHarris
Keywords: None
Views: 1191
Comments: 84

Muslim Workers at Nebraska Meatpacking Plant Complain of Religious Harassment

Sunday , July 22, 2007

OMAHA, Neb. — Supervisors at a meatpacking plant have fired or harassed dozens of Somali Muslim employees for trying to pray at sunset, violating civil rights laws, the workers and their advocates say.

The five- to 10-minute prayer, known as the maghrib, must be done within a 45-minute window around sunset, according to Muslim rules. The workers at the Swift & Co. plant in Grand Island say they quit, were fired or were verbally and physically harassed over the issue.

The Council on American-Islamic Relations has drafted a complaint to be filed with the federal Equal Employment Opportunity Commission. The petition compiles testimony from at least 44 workers who had planned to sign the complaint during a meeting Sunday. The signing was changed to a later date because of a logistical problem.

Jama Mohamed, 28, said he was fired in June for leaving a production line to pray. Supervisors would not allow him a break, he said.

"Some of them took the (prayer) mat from me; they started shouting, they started telling me to stop it, and one of them grabbed me by the collar of my shirt," Mohamed said through an interpreter.

"I was crying at the time this was happening to me, and when I finished I told them while they were doing that I was in the middle of a prayer."

Mohamed said he was then called to an office, where a supervisor fired him.

Mohamed Rage, chairman of the Omaha Somali-American Community Organization, said Swift had fired at least two dozen workers for praying since May.

Donald Selzer, an attorney for Greeley, Colo.-based Swift, said only three Somali workers were fired for reasons relating to the issue, and that it was for walking off the line without permission, not for praying.

Unscheduled breaks can force unplanned shutdowns of lines, Selzer said.

"That is a significant number of employees, and there is not much of a way to accommodate that consistent with keeping the production online," he said.

The complaint reprises issues that boiled over in May, when 120 Somali workers abruptly quit for similar reasons. About 70 returned a week later, but union officials worried the issue would resurface through the late spring as sunset came later in the evening shift.

"For three days it was all good and we were praying; there was no hassle, no interference, nothing at all," said Ali Schire, 30, who said he returned to the plant but was later fired for trying to pray.

"All of a sudden after three days it just all got loose, and they were suspending people, they were firing people," Schire said through an interpreter. "Some of the people even had to give up praying at all for fear of being fired."

Said Selzer: "These people are absolutely entitled to pray, and they should not be interfered with for doing so. But on the other hand, the only situations that I've been made aware of are people that walk off the job without permission, and that's a different kind of an issue."

Dan Hoppes, president of Local 22 of the United Food and Commercial Workers Union, said he had not heard of many Somali workers being fired or harassed since May. Prayer breaks are not in the contract, he said, but he hopes to revisit the issue in negotiations in 2010.

Swift rejected a suggestion by the Council on American-Islamic Relations to allow the Somalis who work evenings to leave in smaller shifts to avoid disrupting lines, said Rima Kapitan, an attorney with the group.

The company suggested phasing evening workers to shifts earlier in the day that did not interrupt prayer times, Selzer and Hoppes said.

"We're perfectly happy to try to pursue that angle so that we don't have this conflict," Selzer said. "But given the people who are on the second shift — many of whom prefer to be there — this sort of presents the operational realities."

Mohamed said it is important for Muslims to pray within scheduled times and not to postpone prayers or say them early.

"I would never forgive myself and God would not forgive me if I do not pray on time because I want to earn some money," he said.

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Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 73.

#4. To: JCHarris (#0)

They are going to have to allow them the time to pray. They have a constitutional right to freedom of religion under the First Amendment, and this is not such a big issue it can't be worked out in an agreeable fashion.

I do not support allowing cabbies to dictate what their passengers carry with them as has been the controversy in recent years, but their is no reason to begrudge people time to prey during set praying times.

Christians who's sect demands they go to church on Sunday, or Orthodox Jews who observe the Sabbath are respected and not sanctioned if their bosses would prefer they work those days, so there is precedent to respect these people's religion too.

Ferret Mike  posted on  2007-07-22   20:32:08 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#8. To: Ferret Mike (#4)

Christians who's sect demands they go to church on Sunday, or Orthodox Jews who observe the Sabbath are respected and not sanctioned if their bosses would prefer they work those days, so there is precedent to respect these people's religion too.

That is incorrect as is the claim of a Constitutional right to practice a religion how, where, and as you wish -- and employers DO schedule practicing Christians on Sunday morning regularly. That's why the Catholic Church and other groups offer a Saturday Vigil service in addition to the normal Sunday service.

The First Amendment says "Congress shall make no law" - it says absolutely nothing about private employers. Private employers *can* restrict the how, when, and where of religious practice. There is plenty of precedent.

A large number of cases where Christians have attempted to "witness" in the workplace have already been lost by the practitioners of that religion. There is ample precedent that if the religious practice disrupts the workplace, it can be denied.

There are also cases where the mere posting of portions of Leviticus inside a worker's cubicle is restricted. Again, ample precedent...

It will be interesting to see how the courts react to this if it makes it there. You can bet that the "Christians denied" precedents will be introduced. My money says that it won't really go anywhere and that the Muslims will be required to make the same modifications that other groups are.

mirage  posted on  2007-07-23   0:23:33 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#10. To: mirage, Ferret Mike, christine (#8)

My religion requires me to beat my wives in rotation three times a day, and the company better not try to use some flimsy excuse like boycotts by women to infringe on my 1st amendment rights!

tell em, Mike!

HAH!

HOUNDDAWG  posted on  2007-07-23   1:09:41 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#30. To: HOUNDDAWG (#10)

"My religion requires me to beat my wives in rotation three times a day, and the company better not try to use some flimsy excuse like boycotts by women to infringe on my 1st amendment rights!"

They are not victimizing others by wanting to pray at their normal times like someone who physically attacks someone else.

I have seen the city bus company in Portland, Oregon have to change their dress code to allow women drivers of a very orthodox Christian sect wear skirts or dresses and not slacks, Sihks are generally allowed their heargear but not their ceremonial daggers which fall under regulations about having weapons at work, and I have asked for and gotten Pagan holidays -- like the Winter Solstice -- off before, and see nothing wrong with respecting employees enough to make minor adjustments to accomidate their religious needs and beliefs.

Ferret Mike  posted on  2007-07-23   15:39:56 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#34. To: Ferret Mike (#30)

and see nothing wrong with respecting employees enough to make minor adjustments to accomidate their religious needs and beliefs.

Emphasis on minor.

BlueEyedGirl  posted on  2007-07-23   17:55:00 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#37. To: BlueEyedGirl (#34)

"Emphasis on minor."

Emphasis on you have nothing to say here. Whine and snip to someone who cares. I don't.

Ferret Mike  posted on  2007-07-23   18:04:31 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#47. To: Ferret Mike (#37)

Emphasis on you have nothing to say here. Whine and snip to someone who cares. I don't.

Oh, grow up.

According to the article they were "walking off the line without permission". Shutting down the line is NOT a minor accomodation - your religious days are - and I bet you give them notice, too.

BlueEyedGirl  posted on  2007-07-23   18:30:02 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#50. To: BlueEyedGirl (#47)

"Oh, grow up"

Likewise, I'm sure.

"According to the article they were "walking off the line without permission". Shutting down the line is NOT a minor accomodation - your religious days are - and I bet you give them notice, too."

Which is why both the workers and management need to sit down, explore the options and work out a comprimise.

As for me, last Winter I worked taking orders for Harry and David (Bear Creek Orchards) and worked on the Winter Solstice because our ceremonies times did not conflict. It was my first Winter back at this job in several years. Had I asked I would have gotten the day off according to what management told me a couple of months earlier.

But it was a busy day, and they were short people, so I took mercy on them. Terrible thing for someone of Wicca to do, yes? ;-)

Ferret Mike  posted on  2007-07-23   18:36:50 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#73. To: Ferret Mike (#50)

But it was a busy day, and they were short people, so I took mercy on them. Terrible thing for someone of Wicca to do, yes? ;-)

We've probably all worked holidays - I certainly have.

But it's important that you take care of your job so that the place keeps running (and they can pay you) and you don't get fired (and they continue to pay you).

Walking off a line shuts it down, screws up everyone and production. This should have been brought up during the hiring process by the employees (their religion, therefore their responsibility) or they should have simply asked for a different shift.

Most people are willing to make accomodations, especially religious ones, but they need to be accomodations that can be made without disrupting the entire organization.

BlueEyedGirl  posted on  2007-07-23   22:40:53 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


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