Footbaths Provoking the Wrath of the Christian Right?

Footbaths Provoking the Wrath of the Christian Right?

8 August 2007 · No Comments

Um, don’t some folks have better uses for their time? The New York Times has an article over an ongoing controversy regarding the installation of footbaths in some college dorms:

When pools of water began accumulating on the floor in some restrooms at the University of Michigan-Dearborn, and the sinks pulling away from the walls, the problem was easy to pinpoint. On this campus, more than 10 percent of the students are Muslims, and as part of ritual ablutions required before their five-times-a-day prayers, some were washing their feet in the sinks.

The solution seemed straightforward. After discussions with the Muslim Students’ Association, the university announced that it would install $25,000 foot-washing stations in several restrooms.

But as a legal and political matter, that solution has not been quite so simple. When word of the plan got out this spring, it created instant controversy, with bloggers going on about the Islamification of the university, students divided on the use of their building-maintenance fees, and tricky legal questions about whether the plan is a legitimate accommodation of students’ right to practice their religion — or unconstitutional government support for that religion. [...]

But after a Muslim student at Minneapolis Community and Technical College slipped and hurt herself last fall while washing her feet in a sink, word got out there that the college was considering installing a footbath, and a local columnist accused the college of a double standard — stopping a campus coffee cart from playing Christmas music but taking a different attitude toward Islam.

“After the column, a Christian conservative group issued an action alert to its members, which prompted 3,000 e-mail and 600 voice messages to me and/or legislators,” said Phil Davis, president of the college.

Sadly, I suspect that some folks are missing the difference between stopping a campus-sponsored entity from promoting a particular religion (although I do have to admit that banning Christmas music might be overkill), and taking measures to protect against a slip-and-fall lawsuit.

You’d think that 9/11 turned us into a country of Islamaphobes.

Tags: Religion