New York Nuns Sue State Over Transgender Law for Nursing Homes


NY nuns sue state over transgender law for nursing homes
For over 125 years, the Dominican Sisters located in Hawthorne, New York have provided comfort and nursing care for patients who are poor and suffering from incurable cancer. Faced with fines, court orders, the potential loss of licensing and jail time if they do not comply with the State’s new transgender mandate, the sisters filed suit in federal court today to protect their ministry and their patients.

Mother Marie Edward Deutsch, Superior General of the Hawthorne Dominicans, said that the sisters’ first reaction was disappointment. “We Sisters have taken care of patients from all walks of life, ideologies, and faiths. We treat each patient with dignity and Christian charity. We have never had complaints. We cannot implement New York’s mandate without violating our Catholic faith,” she explained.
The New York State Department of Health sent the first in a series of “Dear Administrator” letters to the Hawthorne Dominicans’ 42-bed facility Rosary Hill Home on March 18, 2024. These letters listed the state’s demands and were accompanied by a training curriculum requiring the sisters to align patient care and the training of their sisters and employees with the state’s gender ideology.

The New York gender ideology mandate requires Rosary Hill Home and other long-term care facilities in the state to house biological men in women’s rooms even over the opposition of a female roommate, to permit residents and their visitors of one sex to access bathrooms set aside for those of the opposite sex, to use false pronouns, to use language and “create communities” affirming patients’ sexual preferences, and to accommodate patients desire for extramarital sexual relations. Long-term care facilities are also required to ensure that their staff members are trained in “cultural competency” informed by the state’s gender ideology.

The Dominican Sisters of Hawthorne and Rosary Hill Home are members of the Catholic Benefits Association (CBA). They have, through legal counsel provided to them by the CBA, asked the New York State Department of Health for an exemption from these mandates because they infringe upon their Catholic values, burden their exercise of religion and compromise their free speech rights.

After waiting two weeks and not receiving a response from the state to their exemption request, the Hawthorne Dominicans filed a lawsuit on April 6, 2026 in federal court to protect their religious freedom and their ministry to the terminally ill poor.

Martin Nussbaum of the First & Fourteenth law firm and counsel for the Hawthorne Dominicans, said, “this was especially disappointing because New York’s law provides religious exemption for long-term care facilities affiliated with the Christian Science Church but not for similar Catholic facilities. The Sisters were left with no choice but to file suit in federal court, and the Catholic Benefits Association has helped them do that.”

Sister Stella Mary Morales, O.P., Administrator of Rosary Hill Home, commented, “our foundress, Mother Alphonsa Hawthorne, charged us to serve those who are ‘to pass from one life to another’ and to ‘make them as comfortable and happy as if their own people had kept them and put them into the very best bedroom.’ We intend to continue honoring this sacred obligation but need relief from the Court to do so.”

Visit the Hawthorne Dominicans v. Hochul case page for more details.
Learn more about the Hawthorne Dominicans ministry on their site.
Source - https://catholicbenefitsassociation.org/ny-nuns-sue-state-over-transgender-law-for-nursing-homes/

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