Last Halloween, Gina Uberti took vacation days to celebrate the Wiccan new
year in Salem, Massachusetts, the town infamously known for the witch trials of
1692 that ended with the hanging of 14 women.
Less than a month after Uberti took part in the festivities of Samhain, one
of the holiest days in the Wiccan calendar, she was fired from her job as a
district sales manager for Bath & Body Works.
In a complaint filed in federal court in Connecticut last week, Uberti
alleges she was unfairly terminated for practicing Wicca, known as the largest
of neopagan religions.
Uberti alleges in the lawsuit that her boss said just before she was fired,
“You will need a new career in your new year. … I will be damned if I have a
devil worshiper on my team.”
Uberti says in the suit that her troubles at work began shortly after she
returned from her trip to Salem. Her boss lamented that Uberti had chosen to go
on vacation during a particularly important week at work, Uberti said. Uberti
said her vacation had been approved by another manager a year in advance and
that she had taken that particular time to celebrate a Wiccan holiday.
“That is the most ridiculous thing I’ve ever heard,” Uberti’s boss, Sandra
Scibelli said, according to court documents.
Until she was fired November 20, 2008, Uberti had worked for the retailer for
eight years, first as a manager in the company’s Milford, Connecticut, store and
then as a sales manager from her home in nearby East Haven.
Uberti filed charges in February with the Equal Employment Opportunity
Commission, which granted her the right to sue in September.
Bath & Body Works is part of Limited Brands Inc, based in Columbus, Ohio.
“We are an equal opportunity employer and do not discriminate against race,
color, religion, gender, gender identity, national origin, citizenship, age,
disability, sexual orientation or marital status,” says Robin Hoffman,
specialist, external communications for Limited Brands. “Additionally, we do not
comment on pending litigation.”
Uberti’s lawsuit seeks compensatory damages for emotional distress and damage
to her career as well as lost pay, vacation days and pension benefits, as well
as other restitution.
Tal Marnin, an attorney with White & Case in New York, says U.S. law
prohibits religious discrimination regardless of whether the religion is widely
practiced or not.
“The employee has to show she is a sincere believer and that her attending
the ceremony was part of her religious observance and practice,” Marnin
said.
The company would have to show Uberti’s absence caused it an “undue
hardship,” Marnin said.
The Wiccan new year, Samhain, takes place the same day as the Celtic new
year. It is considered one of the four holy festivals, or Sabbats, according to
the complaint. Uberti says in her complaint that for the previous six years she
had received and taken time off to make the annual new year’s pilgrimage to
Salem.
Title VII of the Civil Rights Act protects covered employees from
discrimination on the basis of race, color, religion, sex or national
origin.
—Jeremy Smerd
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