We’ve recently come across a chilling Sundance TV series, “Rectify,” about a person exonerated after a twenty-year stint on death row (starring Aden Young).
The series’ portrayal of the hardship of prison is heart-rending.
Safety and security are fleeting. Paradoxically privacy is non-existent and total isolation is nearly constant. The burden on the human mind from this degrading and dehumanizing treatment is barely imaginable — or maybe impossible — to imagine.
This came to mind from a recent decision by U.S. District Court Judge Patrick J. Schiltz (D. Minn.) in a civil lawsuit brought by incarcerated men designated as sex offenders in Moose Lake, Minnesota who seek to practice certain rituals of their professed religion: Asatru.
Asatru appears to be a religion that has a following among incarcerated people (see the “security notes” in the linked document describing the faith).
Asatruar Moose Lake in-mates have complained that prison officials:
In response to the plaintiffs’ complaint, Judge Schiltz, in my view, does a laudable job in taking the plaintiffs’ case seriously. Lesser people might have been dismissive. They might have sought to make light of convicted sex offenders’ pleas for an “Asatru fire grate outside [the] worship area,” candles for Yule observance, denial of “outside food vendors” not to mention Thor’s hammer (in a maximum security prison), and the like.
But before the law, these plaintiffs are no different from any other people claiming their rights to practice their religions. Judge Schiltz dismissed the plaintiffs’ case “without prejudice” for failing to provide enough detail to support their allegations but his order gave them directions as to the basic requirements they would need to meet to bring a viable complaint.
If a society is measured by how it treats its weakest members, which makes sense to many of us, Judge Schiltz’s ruling is a credit to ours.