Catholic News Service -
With the daily news from Capitol Hill focused on the often-combative process of passing legislation to reform immigration, fund the war in Iraq or reauthorize the farm bill, it’s refreshing to look back at another carefully negotiated bill that took a less contentious course.
Ten years ago a diverse coalition of religious and human rights organizations and a bipartisan group in Congress worked together to create a system for addressing religious freedom abuses internationally that arguably is doing what it set out to accomplish.
The International Religious Freedom Act, passed by vast majorities in both houses of Congress and signed into law by President Bill Clinton in October 1998, created a multipronged system for promoting religious freedom, including establishing the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom.
Nearly 10 years later, some of the people involved in passing the measure point to flaws in how it has worked, but said it has improved the U.S. government’s interest in and ability to respond to abuses of religious rights.
Said Tom Farr, a former director of the State Department office charged with implementing the law, “There are probably hundreds, maybe thousands of people walking the earth free today because of this law.”
But Farr, now an author and vice chair of the board of Christian Solidarity Worldwide-USA, an international nongovernmental organization that advocates religious freedom, quickly added a caution. “But has it perceptibly reduced religious freedom abuses in the past 10 years? The answer is it has not.”
Nina Shea, vice chair of the commission, said important work is clearly being accomplished. But she also ticked off ways U.S. actions and responses abroad fall short of the ideals she and others had 10 years ago as they worked to pass the law.
Shea said important work is being accomplished, such as focusing on fundamentalists in southern Sudan who were targeting non-Muslims for elimination. Bringing international attention to that situation helped resolve the problem in that corner of Sudan, she said.
In other places, success is not the rule. Shea gave the example of an ongoing battle to persuade Saudi Arabia’s government to stop using official textbooks that promote violence in support of the notion that the Wahabi strain of Islam is superior to all other religions.
She also criticized as uneven the way some U.S. embassies treat religious rights issues in their dealings with a country, and the lack of administration attention to “Christians being eradicated from Iraq.”
The religious freedom commission is an independent federal organization of part-time volunteers from different faith backgrounds with expertise on the subject of religious rights. Its members monitor religious freedom issues — frequently traveling to trouble spots — and advising the administration. The commission’s work complements that done by an office in the State Department.
The law formally set as U.S. policy the practice of condemning religious freedom abuses and defined steps the administration should follow, ranging from diplomatic pressure to trade and financial sanctions.
John Hanford III, the current ambassador-at-large for the office, said among the Religious Freedom Act’s accomplishments are laws in some countries that have been changed, and people have been released from prison as a result of U.S. intervention.
But John Shattuck, president of the John F. Kennedy Library Foundation, said there are misunderstandings especially abroad about the law’s intent, such as assumptions held by some that it exists to make it easier to “export a U.S. brand of religion” or is intended to protect only “missionary religions” that proselytize abroad.
Others see the law as “another example of U.S. unilateralism,” he said.
At a time of “unprecedented diversity of religion and unprecedented contact with each other,” the federal government at all levels ought to have greater interest in understanding and protecting religious beliefs, he said.