Plaintiff Wayne Ford (“Ford”) is a practicing Muslim incarcerated within the New York State Department of Correctional Services (“DOCS”). This lawsuit arises out of the refusal of defendants John McGinnis, Patrick McGann, and Gordon Lord (collectively “defendants” or “prison officials”), to provide Ford one meal in January of 2000. The meal Ford claims he was denied, however, was not just any meal but the Eid ul Fitr feast, held once a year in conjunction with a daylong celebration marking the successful completion of Ramadan. Ford claims that by denying him this meal, prison officials infringed his constitutional rights under the Free Exercise Clause of the First Amendment. See U.S. Const. amend. I.
The district court (Scheindlin, J.) granted defendants’ motion for summary judgment chiefly on the ground that the meal, which the prison served over a week after the period prescribed by Muslim law and tradition, had lost all objective religious significance due to its postponement and, therefore, did not warrant free exercise protection.
See Ford v. McGinnis,
Ford did not cross-move for summary judgment below and does not argue on appeal that he is entitled to judgment as a matter of law, but rather he argues that his ease was derailed prematurely. For the reasons discussed below, we agree and remand for the district court to determine whether the denial of the meal was reasonably related to a legitimate penological interest under the test applied in
Turner v. Safley,
BACKGROUND
Wayne Ford has been incarcerated within the DOCS prison system since 1989. Since 1993, he has indicated to prison officials that he is a Muslim. 2 The circumstances that led to Ford’s failure to receive the Eid ul Fitr feast arоse when Ford was transferred from Rikers Island to Downstate Correctional Facility (“Downstate”) in conjunction with a court appearance on January 7, 2000. Coincidentally, this was the same day on which the Eid ul Fitr was observed at Downstate.
The Eid ul Fitr, according to the DOCS-employed religious authorities 3 whose testimony was before the district court, is one of two major religious observances in Is *585 lam. 4 On the day of the Eid ul Fitr, Muslims celebrate the successful completion of the holy month of Ramadan, during which observant Muslims fast from sun up to sun down. The end of Ramadan is signaled by the sighting of the new moon, and Muslim law and tradition dictate that the Eid ul Fitr follow thereafter within three days. Celebration of the Eid ul Fitr typically begins with a sweet breakfast, followed by prayer, and later the Eid ul Fitr feast.
In 2000, Ramadan was called to an end when the new moon was sighted on January 6, and the Eid ul Fitr was celebrated at Downstate on the following day. Muslim prisoners, therefore, awoke on January 7 to a sweet breakfast and were then permitted to congregate for prayer. The traditional feast, however, was not held on that day. Rather, the feast was postponed to January 15, pursuant to the “Religious Faith’s Holy Day Calendar,” a DOCS-issued calendar describing “the feats [sic] and fasts for the various religious faith groups represented and verified” in DOCS. The calendar describes the Eid ul Fitr as follows:
Family Holy Day celebration. This is an observance of thanksgiving, gift giving, etc. On the first day following the end of Ramadan, a communal prayer and feast are celebrated with family. When this day falls on a weekday, the festivities may be moved to a weekend day in order to accommodate the families who will be participating.
Imam Hamin Rashada, Downstate’s Muslim Chaplain, authorized the postponement after consulting with some Muslim inmates who preferred to hold the event on a weekend so that their families could attend. The foods composing the Eid ul Fitr feast 5 were therefore not served at Downstate on January 7, but instead were served on January 15.
Shortly after arriving at Downstate on January 7, Ford became aware that the Eid ul Fitr feast had been postponed. Although Ford was held in Downstate’s Special Housing Unit (“SHU” or “keeploek”), a more restricted confinement reserved for prisoners who present disciplinary or other problems, he wrote to Imam Rashada on January 10 — three days after all aspects of the Eid ul Fitr except the feast were observed at Downstate — requesting that his name be placed on a list to receive the Eid ul Fitr feast on January 15.
Ford was apparently not the first person to express concern over the prospect of Muslim SHU prisoners missing out on their religious meals. Just months before, Imam Warith-Deen Umar, who was then the Ministerial Program Coordinator for Islamic Affairs, issued the following memorandum to all the Muslim Chaplains within DOCS regarding SHU inmates’ Ramadan meals and the sрecial meals for the Eid ul Fitr and the Eid ul Adha (collectively, the “Id meals”):
A major concern of Muslim prisoners in special housing units and keeploek status is their accommodations during the month of Ramadan fast. With Ramadan and the two Ids coming soon, this is a good time to remind you and advise you to include the service of confined Muslims in your ministerial plans for Ramadan and the Ids. These inmates, more than often, will participate in the fast. Arrangements should be made for them *586 to receive their evening meals in time for properly breaking the fast. They should also be able to receive the Id meals.
(emphasis added). This memorandum was copied to all prison superintendents.
Although Muslim inmates in SHU at Downstate did receive their Ramadan meals throughout the holy month, Imam Rashada informed Ford that SHU prisoners were not allowed to receive the Eid ul Fitr feast. Ford then filed the following grievance with the prison’s Inmate Grievance Review Committee: 6
I am a Muslim in SHU. Today Imam Rashida brought to my attention that Downstate C.F. deniеs Muslims on keeplock or in SHU our meals from the Eid A1 Fitra and Eid Al Ahda [sic]. The Eid A1 Fitra and Eid Al Ahda are two Islamic holidays that are constitutionally protected even in prison. Downstate C.F. is the only prison in DOCS that denies Muslims in SHU or keeplock our Eid A1 Fitra and Eid A1 Ahda [sic ] meals.
After three days passed without response, Ford sent a letter — dated January 13— reiterating his grievance to defendant Downstate Superintendent John McGinnis. It was, however, not until five days after the January 15 Eid ul Fitr feast was served at Downstate that Ford received a letter from defendant Downstate Assistant Deputy Superintendent Gordon Lord stating that inmates in SHU do not receive the Eid ul Fitr feast, as that meal is offered to only those inmates permitted to attend the event. Ford was never served the Eid ul Fitr feast for that Ramadan season.
Ford began this lawsuit pro se, complaining under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 that the refusal to serve him the Eid ul Fitr feast denied him rights guaranteed under the Free Exercise Clause of the First Amendment. After surviving defendants’ motion to dismiss,
see Ford v. McGinnis,
The district court found it significant that although the Eid ul Fitr is governed by DOCS Directive 4202, which sets out prison officials’ obligations in accommodating prisoners’ religious practices, the postponed feast is held pursuant to DOCS Directive 4022, which covers so-called “Family Day Events.” Id. at 344. The Director of Ministerial and Family Services for DOCS, John Loconte, averred that DOCS does not place any religious significance on “Family Day Events” and, moreover, none of the DOCS Muslim clerics “ever stated that any inmate’s religion requires attendance at the DOCS-sponsored ‘Family Day Events,’ ” and further that “no religious advisor to DOCS has *587 evеr suggested that the special ‘Family Day Events’ observing holy days have any religiously-mandated significance.”
Furthermore, the district court credited the testimony of three DOCS religious authorities, one of whom stated that “[t]he religious need [for the Eid ul Fitr feast], the religious urgency of it was within the parameters of three days [following the end of Ramadan]. Beyond that, it’s a family event.” Another religious authority said “[o]nce you move it, it’s no longer a religious day.” And still another of these religious authorities clarified that participation in the Eid ul Fitr is not mandated by Muslim law or teaching: “If they don’t participate in the Eid they have not committed a sin, as opposed to something that is ordered by Allah in the Koran if they don’t participate in it then they have committed a sin.”
Despite recognizing that “Ford sincerely believes that celebration of the Eid ul Fitr — including the Eid ul Fitr prayer and the Eid ul Fitr feast — is critical to his observance as a practicing Muslim,” id. at 345, the district court held that defendants “did not violate Ford’s First Amendment rights when they refused to provide him with the January 15 Family Day Event meal,” id. at 347-48. The district court further held that defendants were entitled to summary judgment on two alternative grounds: (i) the denial of one Eid ul Fitr feast is a constitutionally de minimis burden on Ford’s free exercise of religion, id. at 348 n. 10, and (ii) defendants were entitled to qualified immunity because, in light of the advice of the DOCS religious authorities, it was objectively reasonable for them to believe that their refusal to provide Ford the Eid ul Fitr feast did not violate his constitutional rights, id. at 348.
On appeal, Ford argues that the defendants were not entitled to a judgment as a matter of law on any of these grounds. Foremost, Ford maintains that the district court erred as a matter of law in applying an objective test to his free exercise claim. He further contends that whether his constitutional injury is de minimis is a disputed issue of fact. Finally, as to the issue of qualified immunity, Ford argues that as a matter of law the reliance upon the advice of religious authorities is insufficient to render the defendants’ conduct objectively reasonable, or, even if not, there is at the very least a factual dispute over whether or not the defendants did rely upon the advice of the DOCS religious authorities in deciding to refuse Ford the feast.
Defendants offer only a tepid defense of the district court’s conclusion that there had been no violation of Ford’s free exercise rights because the meal, once moved, had no objective religious significance. They instead argue that they are entitled to an affirmance on the district court’s alternative holdings, emphasizing the de minimis nature of the burden on Ford’s religious exercise and arguing that the defendants are entitled to qualified immunity. Defendants further argue, for the first time, that — under Turner and O’Lone— any infringement of Ford’s free exercise rights was excusable as reasonably related to a legitimate penological interest.
DISCUSSION
We review the district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of defendants
de novo
and focus on whether the district court properly concluded that there was no genuine issue as to any material fact and that defendants were entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
See Allstate Ins. Co. v. Mazzola,
*588 I. Free Exercise Claim
Prisoners have long been understood to retain some measure of the constitutional protection afforded by the First Amendment’s Free Exercise Clause.
See Pell v. Procunier,
Whether оr not brought by prisoners, free exercise claims often test the boundaries of the judiciary’s competence, as courts are “singularly ill-equipped to sit in judgment on the verity of an adherent’s religious beliefs.”
Patrick v. LeFevre,
A. Ford’s Sincerely Held Religious Belief
In free exercise cases, scrutiny of the prisoner’s sincerity is often essential in “differentiating between those beliefs that are held as a matter of conscience and those that are animated by motives of deception ■ and fraud.”
Patrick,
The district court nevertheless held that Ford’s “individualized, subjective” beliefs are not entitled to First Amendment protection in light of the testimony of the DOCS religious authorities that Ford’s belief did not comport with “Islam’s actual requirements.” Id. at 347. Weighing the unanimity of the DOCS religious authorities’ opinion that the feast, when not held within the three days immediately following Ramadan, was “no longer of religious significance,” against Ford’s assertion to the contrary, the district court held that the balance tipped decidedly in favor of the defendants, and that Ford’s beliefs did not warrant constitutional protection. Id.
In order to reach that conclusion, the district court distinguished
Jackson v. Mann,
Ford argues on appeal that the district court impermissibly substituted an objective test for the subjective test articulated by the Supreme Court in
Frazee v. Illinois Department of Employment Security,
489
*589
U.S. 829,
The Supreme Court rejected the state courts’ reasoning, stating that none of its prior free exercise decisions turned on a plaintiffs membership in a particular sect “or on any tenet of the sect involved.”
Id.
at 832-33,
[W]e reject the notion that to claim the protection of the Free Exercise Clause, one must be responding to the commands of a particular religious organization. Here, Frazee’s refusal was based on a sincerely held religious belief. Under our cases, he was entitled to invoke First Amendment protection.
Id.
at 834,
In many respects, the Supreme Court’s opinion in
Frazee
mirrored this Court’s approach to free exercise claims previously articulated in
Patrick v. LeFevre,
We also havе employed a subjective test to evaluate the free exercise claims of prisoners in two more recent cases.
See Jolly v. Coughlin,
We refused to evaluate the objective reasonableness of the prisoner’s belief, holding that our “scrutiny extends only to whether a claimant sincerely holds a particular belief and whether the belief is religious in nature.” Id. In upholding the plaintiffs claim, we made clear that to apply an objective test in such cases would require courts to resolve questions that are beyond their competence:
[Cjourts are not permitted to ask whether a particular belief is appropriate or true — however unusual or unfamiliar the belief may be. While it is a delicate task to evaluate religious sincerity without questioning religious verity, our free exercise doctrine is based upon the premise that courts are capable of distinguishing between these two questions .... We have no competence to examine whether plaintiffs belief has objective validity.
Id. (emphasis removed).
With this understanding of the sweep of the Constitution’s free exercise guarantee, we consider
Jackson,
the case upon which the district court largely relied in disposing of the instant case. Nathaniel Jackson, a prisoner who identified himself as Jewish, requested a kosher diet.
See Jackson,
The district court thus erred in reading
Jackson
in so limited a fashion. Nothing in
Jackson,
or the cases on which its holding relied, permitted the district court to assess the objective validity of Ford’s belief that the Eid ul Fitr feast carried religious significance even when postponed. By looking behind Ford’s sincerely held belief, the district court impermissibly confronted what is, in essence, the “ecclesiastical question” of whether, under Islam, the postponed meal retained religious meaning.
Cf. Hernandez v. Comm’r of Internal Revenue,
The opinions of the DOCS religious authorities cannot trump the plaintiffs sincere and religious belief.
8
For purposes of
*591
summary judgment, we must accept the district court’s finding that Ford “sincerely believes that celebration of the Eid ul Fitr — including the Eid ul Fitr prayer and the Eid ul Fitr feast — is critical to his observance as a practicing Muslim,”
Ford,
B. Substantial Burden
Defendants next argue that, even if his belief was sincerely held and religious, Ford’s claim still fails since the denial of this one meal is not a “substantial burden” — or, in other words, is a “de minimis burden” — on his religious exercise. Again relying on the apparent lack of objective validity to Ford’s belief, the district court held that the absence of a substantial burden provided an alternative basis for granting defendants judgment as a matter of law. Id. at 348 n. 10.
The notion that a plaintiff must establish a substantial burden on his religious exercise to claim constitutional protection is derived from the Supreme Court’s test in
Sherbert v. Verner,
*592
Then in
Employment Division, Department of Human Resources v. Smith,
In a now familiar saga, the details of which need not be recounted here, Congress responded to
Smith
by statutorily mandating application of the
Sherbert
test to all free exercise claims across the board, only to have the Supreme Court invalidate the statute as an attempt by Congress to legislate in excess of its constitutional powers.
See City of Boerne v. Flores,
Now with RFRA invalidated,
10
however, the Circuits apparently are split over whether prisoners must show a substantial burden on their religious exercise in order to maintain free exercise claims.
Compare Williams v. Morton,
In this case, Ford has not argued that the substantial burden test no longer persists as a threshold requirement to his free exercise claim. Given that fact, and because we did not benefit from the parties’ briefing on the issue, we therefore proceed in this appeal on the assumption that the substantial burden test applies. 11
*593 Aрplying the substantial burden test requires courts to distinguish important from unimportant religious beliefs, a task for which we have already explained courts are particularly ill-suited. Always present is the danger that courts will make eonclu-sory judgments about the unimportance of the religious practice to the adherent rather than confront the often more difficult inquiries into sincerity, religiosity and the sufficiency of the penological interest asserted to justify the burden. The substantial burden test, however, presupposes that there will be cases in which it comfortably could be said that a belief or practice is so peripheral to the plaintiffs religion that any burden can be aptly characterized as constitutionally de minimis.
The district court found that Ford had not established a substantial burden because “given that the Muslim clerics testified that participation in the Eid ul Fitr is not religiously required and that the meal loses all religious significance when moved, dеprivation of a post-Eid meal can be seen as a de minimis burden on Ford’s religious freedom.”
Ford,
Insofar as the district court implied that in order for a burden to be substantial the burdened practice must be mandated by an adherent’s religion, we disagree. Whether a particular practice is religiously mandated is surely relevant to resolving whether a particular burden is substantial.
See Thomas,
To confine the protection of thе First Amendment to only those religious practices that are mandatory would necessarily lead us down the unnavigable road of attempting to resolve intra-faith disputes over religious law and doctrine.
See id.
at 716,
The relevant question in determining whether Ford’s religious beliefs were substantially burdened is whether participation in the Eid ul Fitr feast, in particular, is considered central or important to
*594
Ford’s practice of Islam. Defendants were not entitled to a judgment as a matter of law on this question, as the testimony of the DOCS religious authorities that, under Muslim law the feast is not religious once postponed, is not determinative of this issue. The district court credited Ford’s claim that he sincerely believed that the Eid ul Fitr feast is “critical to his observance as a practicing Muslim.”
Ford,
We would be inclined to hold on the basis of the record before us that Ford has established a substantial burden as a matter of law, were it not for the fact that there is apparently a factual dispute as to whether Ford was served a substitute Eid ul Fitr feast on January 7.
See Ford,
C. Reasonably Related to Legitimate Penological Interests
Even if defendants abridged Ford’s free exercise rights by refusing him the Eid ul Fitr, their conduct was constitutional if reasonably related to some legitimate pe-nological interests.
13
See Overton v. Bazzetta,
In
Turner,
the Supreme Court made clear that the standard of review for prisoners’ constitutional claims is necessarily more deferential in light of the “intractable problems” of prison administration: “[W]hen a prison regulation impinges on inmatеs’ constitutional rights, the regulation is valid if it is reasonably related to legitimate penological interests.”
Turner,
Determining whether a particular regulation meets the
Turner
standard, according to the Supreme Court, may involve the weighing of the following factors. First, there must be a valid and rational connection between the regulation and the legitimate government interest justifying it. Second, the claimed infringement is to be evaluated in light of the prisoners’ other available means of exercising the right. Third, the consequences of requiring accommodation of the right on prison staff, other prisoners and the allocation of prison resources generally should be considered. Finally, the court should consider whether available, low-cost alternatives exist that would accommodatе the right without compromising valid penological interests.
Id.
at 89-91,
The Supreme Court applied the
Turner
standard to a prisoner’s free exercise claim in
O’Lone,
upholding a prison regulation that prevented Muslim prisoners from attending what were claimed to be mandatory religious services.
O’Lone,
Recognizing that the Supreme Court in
Turner
and
O’Lone
intended to accord prison officials a high level of deference, we thereafter made clear that once prison officials put forward a legitimate penological interest to justify an infringement upon a prisoner’s religious free exercise, the burden remains with the prisoner to “show that these [penological] concerns were irrational.”
Fromer v. Scully,
874
*596
F.2d 69, 74 (2d Cir.1989) (upholding prison regulation rеquiring prisoners’ beards be no longer than one inch);
see also Overton,
539 U.S. at-,
Relying on Turner and O’Lone, defendants argue that, despite the subjective religious beliefs some prisoners place on events such as the Eid ul Fitr feast, these events are chiefly held for the legitimate penological and rehabilitative purposes of bringing inmates together with their families. Since SHU inmates cannot attend the events, defendants argue that this purpose would not be furthered by providing keeplock prisoners the feast, and that they therefore had the discretion to deny Ford’s request. Defendants also emphasize the administrative burdens that such events impose upon prison staff and argue that they have an interest in not taking on the additional burden of accommodating the special requests of SHU-housed prisoners. These penological interests, according to defendants, are sufficient to justify any infringement upon Ford’s religious exercise, especially in light of the many other opportunities Muslim prisoners are given to practice their faith.
Ford, however, counters that prison officials have no legitimate penological interest in refusing to accommodate his religious exercise merely because accommodating his right would not further the completely unrelated purpose of bringing prisoners together with their families. Furthermore, Ford stresses that prison officials could have provided him the meal at almost no extra cost and without imposing any meaningful administrative burdens. Ford argues that the defendants’ claims to the contrary are belied by the fact that in addition to accommodating the many religious, dietary requests of prisoners on a daily basis, prison officials in other facilities have consistently served the Eid ul Fitr feast to SHU-housed prisoners. Indeed, even in SHU at Downstate — where Fоrd was incarcerated at all times relevant to this litigation' — the Eid ul Fitr feast apparently has been served to prisoners in recent years.
None of these arguments, however, were made to. the district court, as defendants did not move for summary judgment on these grounds. Consequently, the record is insufficient to resolve this fact — and context — specific dispute. We therefore cannot accept defendants’ invitation to weigh the Turner factors for the first time on appeal. In order to facilitate the necessary findings of fact and to give Ford an adequate opportunity to prove that the proffered interests lack a rational relationship to the defendants’ conduct, the proper course is to remand. If the defendants renew their motion for summary judgment, the district court will be able to assess the facts in light of the Turner balancing test in the first instance.
II. Qualified Immunity
As with public officers generally, prison officials performing tasks entrusted to their discretion typically “are shielded from liability for civil damages insofar as their conduct does not violate clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known.”
Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
Balanced against the desire “to shield officials responsibly attempting to perform their public duties in good faith from having to explain their actions to the satisfaction of a jury” is the need “to hold responsible public officials exercising their power in a wholly unjustified manner.”
Duamutef v. Hollins,
We agree with the district court’s discussion of qualified immunity insofar as it found that the constitutional right at issue is clearly established.
Ford,
We part company with the district court, however, over the reasonableness of defendants’ belief that they did not violate Ford’s constitutional rights. The district court held that it was “objectively reasonable for defendants to rely on” the advice of the DOCS religious authorities to conclude that the postponed Eid ul Fitr feast did not retain religious significance.
Ford,
Finally, inasmuch as defendants premise their qualified immunity defense on their reasonable belief that their conduct was justified by a legitimate penological interest,
see Shabazz v. Coughlin,
CONCLUSION
Always careful to resolve only the questions as they are presented to us, we hold only that defendants were not entitled to summary judgment on the grounds relied upon by the district court. On remand, the district court should embark on the Turner/O’Lone inquiry if a renewed motion for summary judgment is made by defendants and after the parties have had sufficient opportunity to complete discovery on this issue. Consideration of the Turner factors set out above should provide the district court with a basis to determine whеther the refusal to provide Ford the Eid ul Fitr was sufficiently justified by legitimate penological interests. Only if the Tumer/O’Lone balance tips in Ford’s favor should the district court then consider whether the defendants nevertheless could have reasonably believed that their conduct was justified by a legitimate penological interest, and thus are entitled to qualified immunity.
For the reasons stated above, we VaCate the district court’s grant of summary judgment to defendants and ReMand for further proceedings consistent with this decision.
Notes
. These facts are recounted in the light most favorable to Ford and largely are taken from the facts as thoroughly set out by the district court.
See Ford,
. The district court heavily relied on the testimony of two current and one former DOCS-employees responsible for different aspects of setting and implementing DOCS policy re-, garding prisoners' observance of Islam within DOCS generally or at Downstate in particular. We refer to Hamin Rashada and Warith-Deen Umаr, who are both Imams, and Shaykh Rahim collectively as the "DOCS religious authorities."
. Islam’s other major religious observance, according to the DOCS religious authorities, is the Eid ul Adha.
. According to the state-wide DOCS Ramadan menu, the Eid ul Fitr feast consisted of halal chicken, whiting, rice, sweet potatoes, tossed salad with dressing, fruit salad, banana, broccoli, bean pie and a beverage.
. Ford's grievance was later dismissed when he was transferred out of Downstate on January 21, 2000. In February 2000, Ford sought review of the dismissal with the Central Office Review Committee for DOCS, but the Committee refused to review Ford's complaint because he had not first sought review of the dismissal of his grievance with Downstate. The district court rejected defendants' argu-merits below that this amounted to a failure to exhaust administrative remedies prior to bringing the present lawsuit.
Ford,
. Jolly's claims were brought under the then-existing Religious Freedom Restoration Act rather than the First Amendment. See discussion, infra Part I.B.
. That the district court’s inquiry was mis
*591
guided is further evidenced by its concern that to rely on a purely subjective test would require prisons to accommodate idiosyncrasies such as an inmate's request to drink actual blood while receiving Holy Communion.
Ford,
. It may be, however, that the alleged burden on the prisoners' free exercise rights in
O’Lone
was indisputably substantial, or that resolving whether the burden was substantial was unnecessary since any burden was reasonably related to the proffered penological interests.
See O'Lone,
. We note that insofar as detention facilities are recipients of federal funds, the Sherbert test may still apply to the free exercise claims of many prisoners under the Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act of 2000, 114 Stat. 803, 42 U.S.C. § 2000cc et seq. Presumably because this statute became effective after the events that gave rise to this litigation, Ford has asserted no claim under this statute.
. At oral argument, defendants’ counsel suggested that this Court has recently reaffirmed the existence of a substantial burden requirement in prisoners’ free exercise claims. The decision defendants’ counsel cited for that proposition, which is also cited in defendants' brief, is an unpublished summary order. As such, it is not binding authority in this Circuit and should not have been cited or argued to this Court. See 2d Cir. R. § 0.23.
. The Eid ul Fitr feast is sufficiently unique in its importance within Islam to distinguish the present case from those in which the mere inability to provide a small number of meals commensurate with a prisoner's religious dietary restrictions was found to be a de minim-is burden.
See Rapier v. Harris,
. At oral argument, defendants suggested for the first time that rather than the framework set out in
Turner
and
O’Lone,
this case should be analyzed under
Smith,
in which the Supreme Court held that a burden on a person's religious belief does not exempt that person from complying with otherwise valid, neutral laws of general applicability. Defendants argue in essence that Ford was refused the meal pursuant to a general policy of declining such meals to SHU prisoners. The Circuits are split over whether
Smith
has any application to prison regulations and, if so, in what circumstances.
See Levitan,
. Ford argues that because the defendants did not put forward any legitimate penological interests in their motion for summary judgment that they waived any defense premised on Turner and O’Lone. We, however, cannot agree as defendants were not required to raise every potential legal argument in their motion for summary judgment.
. Although
Turner
and
O'Lone
concerned the reasonableness of prison regulations, we have previously suggested that the analysis is the same as to an individual decision to deny a prisoner the ability to engage in some requested religious practice.
See Young v. Coughlin,
. Defendants contend that it is not well established that prison officials must provide prisoners with a meal that prison officials reasonably believe is not religious. While the reasonableness of the defendants' conduct is relevant to the second step of the qualified immunity analysis, defendants' beliefs as to the religious content of the Eid ul Fitr feast are irrelevant to whether the claimed right is clearly established.
. Ford argues on appeal that whether the defendants actually relied upon the advice of the religious authorities before refusing him his meal is a disputed issue of fact. Because we hold as a matter of law that the prison officials' conduct was not objectively reasonable, even if done in reliance upon the opinion of the religious authorities that Ford's belief lacked objective religious significance, we need not address this argument.
