Gypsy|1454226261|3984531 said:sonnyjane|1454223914|3984513 said:Jambalaya|1454223329|3984511 said:Where each group is insisting on their rights/needs, the majority vote rules. I think the OP should find out how negotiable the prayers are, and if the majority in her community wants them or not.
Sorry, but there are times when it doesn't matter what the majority vote says, you just shouldn't do it. At one time the majority of people thought slavery was ok. At another time, the majority of people thought it was ok that women not be able to vote. Just because that's the opinion of the majority doesn't mean everyone else should sit back twiddling their thumbs contently. I realize I'm comparing slavery and suffrage to an ultimately inconsequential home owner's association, I'm just not a believer that what the majority says makes it right.
And "tradition" is an even worse argument.
I would file a formal complaint about the Christian prayers. Suggest substituting it with a moment of reflection or silence. Or a general prayer for health and good fortune.
And I would circulate that complaint. And see if you can get others to sign off on it.
Then I would wait to see what happens. If after 4 months nothing has happened. I would file another complaint and this time state that you are not going to pay your HOA fees unless and until it changes. With that note being from a lawyer if needed.
First, she could simply ask the prayers to stop, and see what happens. She could point out that an HOA meeting is a civil proceeding and therefore prayers don't have a place. That might be all she needs to do to get them stopped. The difficulty will come if the spirit of the social grouping is quite strongly religious.
I really like the idea of a moment of reflection or a general prayer/wish for health and good fortune.
If the HOA says no, I really can't imagine filing a lawsuit about this. It seems such a tiny, minor matter to me, but perhaps I am wrong. Big injustices growing from little ones, etc. How would the lawsuit work? I'd assume NonieMarie would have to pay for it herself, or ask others from her community who felt similarly to all bear the cost.
It seems to me that there are much, much bigger injustices to fight for, but again perhaps I am wrong. I'm not well-versed in politics, law, or the ins and outs of civil rights today and where that intersects with religion. I think the people who discuss these things fervently on PS are much better educated than me in this regard. I just explain what I think as best I can and try to apply some common sense.
