Captain Simratpal Singh, 28 was in December last year granted a temporary religious accommodation to serve in the US Army while maintaining his Sikh turban, unshorn hair and beard.
The accommodation, a rare exception, was scheduled to remain in effect until March 31 but in an unprecedented step backward, the US Army recently ordered Singh to report today for "extraordinary, non-standard additional testing as a precondition for remaining in the Army", international law firm McDermott Will & Emery, representing Singh, said in a statement.
Singh is scheduled to be sequestered for three days to undergo testing that no other soldier in the US Army has ever been subjected to, including the soldiers permitted to maintain beards for medical reasons and previously-accommodated Sikh soldiers, the law firms said.
The New York Times said thetests seek to determine if his helmet would fit over his long hair and if his gas mask could seal to his face.
"For years we have worked to avoid litigation under the guiding belief that the US military would finally do the right thing," said Amandeep Sidhu, Partner at McDermott Will and Emery.
"The US Constitution and the Religious Freedom Restoration Act make it clear that Captain Singh has the right to practice his faith in the military and we are confident that the court will agree," said Sidhu.
"I have so much pride in my Sikh identity and service to my nation," Singh had said in December after receiving his temporary accommodation.
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Singh had enrolled in West Point in 2006 and after failed attempts to obtain an accommodation, he had to cut his hair and shave his beard in order to be able to serve in the Army.
Singh, who graduated from West Point with honours in 2010, filed an accommodation request in October last year and was granted a temporary 30-day accommodation to serve while maintaining his Sikh articles of faith.
Senior Counsel at the Becket Fund for Religious Liberty Eric Baxter said the US Army should be trying to get more soldiers like Singh instead of banning them from serving or punishing them for their beliefs.
"It's time for the Pentagon to stop playing games and start doing the right thing - for Captain Singh, for Sikh Americans, and for all Americans," Baxter added.
These generals join 105 Members of Congress, 15 US Senators and 21 national interfaith and civil rights organisations, who have previously signed letters in support of American Sikhs' right to serve.
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