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NJ mosque wins $3.25 million settlement in discrimination case

A New Jersey mosque will receive $3.25 million in damages and attorneys fees from a township that repeatedly denied it the right to build a permanent house of worship.

The settlement, announced by the Justice Department on May 30, was reached after the Islamic Society of Basking Ridge sued Bernards Township, about an hour’s drive west of New York City. The township, which held 39 hearings on the planned mosque, refused to issue building permits.

“Our Constitution guarantees every religious congregation equal treatment under the law,” said Hannah Smith, senior counsel at Becket, a law firm that filed an amicus brief in support of the Islamic Society. “Every religion is a minority in some part of the country. If one religious group can be denied equal treatment because of hostility to their faith, then all religious groups are at risk.”

The Islamic Society planned to build a mosque on four acres it had purchased in 2012. Its cofounder and president, Moham­mad Ali Chaudry, created an antibigotry pledge taken by many state officials and others in response to the harassment of mosque members as they tried to win approval for a new house of worship.

The mosque and the Department of Justice, both of which sued the township, argued that the mosque had met every local zoning requirement and that the town had made up new ones that applied to no other religious community.

On December 21, 2016, a federal judge ruled that the township had illegally discriminated against the mosque.

In addition to the $3.25 million payment, the township agreed to amend its zoning requirement so as to treat all religious groups equally. —Religion News Service

A version of this article, which was edited on June 16, appears in the July 5 print edition under the title “Mosque wins $3.25 million in legal settlement from New Jersey township.”

Lauren Markoe

Lauren Markoe writes for Religion News Service.

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