Orthodox Jewish Woman Sues New York DMV Over Forced Removal of Her Shaitel For License Photo

A Brooklyn woman has taken legal action against New York’s Department of Motor Vehicles, claiming staff at a central Brooklyn office violated her religious rights by demanding she remove her wig during a driver’s license photo appointment last November.

Sara Fellig, an ultra-Orthodox Jewish woman, says the incident left her emotionally distressed and fearful following the alleged disregard for state exemptions allowing religious head coverings in official identification photos.

According to court documents, Fellig arrived at the DMV office with her young daughter for a scheduled appointment. As a married Orthodox Jewish woman, she wore a partial wig and head covering. When Fellig approached the photo counter, a DMV employee instructed her to remove the covering. Fellig objected, explaining that her face was visible and that New York regulations permit religious exemptions for such items. Her mother, who accompanied her, elaborated on the religious significance of the covering under Jewish law.

The employee remained firm, telling Fellig she could not wear “your hat,” and other staff members reinforced the directive.
Faced with pressure from the crowded office-which held nearly 100 people-and mindful of recent antisemitic incidents she had experienced, Fellig decided against contacting her rabbi for guidance. She cited concerns about the current climate against Jewish communities, referencing the Gaza conflict.

Ultimately, she complied with the demand and took the photo, though she later reported experiencing guilt and emotional distress.

In her lawsuit, Fellig seeks monetary damages, cancellation of her current license photo, and issuance of a new one at no cost. She argues that the image’s continued existence causes ongoing harm each time it is viewed.

Her attorney, Emma Freeman, noted that New York’s DMV rules are appropriate but contended they were not applied in Fellig’s case.

(YWN World Headquarters – NYC)

5 Responses

  1. I don’t understand why this story is being publicized. It is embarrassing.

    Also, the portrayal of the story here is misleading or at least different than the way it was reported elsewhere.

    “As a married Orthodox Jewish woman, she wore a partial wig and head covering….The employee remained firm, telling Fellig she could not wear “your hat,” and other staff members reinforced the directive.”

    Other sites reporting this story indicated that the additional “head covering” besides the wig was indeed a hat.

    Please remove this story. It is embarrassing, as mentioned.

  2. I don’t understand. I am an orthodox Jewish woman and if someone tried to force me to take off my head covering for a DMV pic I would have refused and walked out and then dealt with it. Something is off here

  3. This title should be corrected. The woman did not, ch”v, remove her shaitel. She removed her hat, the second covering of her head.

  4. Not following what happened. any married women who covers her hair with even a pea size brain would walk, not take the picture, not get the license AND figure it out- not be intimidated and take off her head covering. STRANGE STORY!!! – Probably missing some crucial details.

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