Close X
Saturday, November 23, 2024
ADVT 
National

Archbishop Fears Quebec Government's Secularism Bill Will Erode Freedoms

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 16 May, 2019 08:08 PM

    MONTREAL — The Quebec government's move to legislate on secularism will come at the expense of individual freedoms, Montreal's archbishop said Thursday.


    Archbishop Christian Lepine said in a statement that while the state must demonstrate neutrality, it must also demonstrate an openness and acceptance towards all its citizens.


    Quebec’s Bill 21 would prohibit public servants in positions of authority — including primary and secondary school teachers, police officers, Crown prosecutors and prison guards — from wearing religious symbols on the job.


    Premier Francois Legault's government has also invoked the notwithstanding clause in the Constitution that would block people from challenging the law the over rights violations.


    "How can one not see that the prohibition against wearing religious symbols is both an obstacle to upholding freedom of conscience and religion, as well as an attack on human dignity, since citizens would be required to conceal their religious identity in the name of a presumed neutrality?" Lepine said.


    "A state that claims to be neutral in this subjective fashion cannot really claim to respect the dignity of its citizens because society and its diverse members are not neutral."


    He pointed to the government's plan to extend the bill to teachers as an example, raised by the Quebec Assembly of Catholic Bishops in March.


    "If teachers cannot wear religious signs at their discretion, the message given to children and youth is that religion has no place in the public sphere, thus relegating those adhering to their religious practice or tradition as second-class citizens," he said.


    Public hearings into the bill wrap up in Quebec City on Thursday and Immigration Minister Simon Jolin-Barrette wants to see the bill passed by mid-June.


    Lepine said taking away individual freedoms in the name of state neutrality is a slippery slope.


    "Relativizing the individual freedoms of citizens in the name of establishing the separation of religion and state and of upholding religious neutrality is a dangerous drift towards a closed form of secularism that tends towards the gradual elimination of individual and collective public expressions of belonging to a religious or faith community," Lepine said.


    Instead, Lepine suggested the government promote a form of secularism where the state preserves, protects and promotes freedoms in the public sphere, allowing for a constructive dialogue in mutual respect.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    'Smart Drugs' Features Experiment Among Those Fuelled By Need To Succeed

     Toronto filmmaker Ann Shin was so intrigued by an animator's tales about doing some of his best work with the help of "smart drugs" that she wanted to learn how they would work if someone tried them as part of a months-long experiment.

    'Smart Drugs' Features Experiment Among Those Fuelled By Need To Succeed

    Low B.C. Snowpacks Reduce Flood Risk, Hike Chance Of Summer Droughts

    VANCOUVER — Snowpacks across British Columbia are below normal this year, reducing the likelihood of flooding but raising the spectre of dry conditions this summer.

    Low B.C. Snowpacks Reduce Flood Risk, Hike Chance Of Summer Droughts

    B.C. Measles Outbreak Prompts Increase In Vaccinations For Kids: Health Minister

    B.C. Measles Outbreak Prompts Increase In Vaccinations For Kids: Health Minister
    VANCOUVER — A measles scare in British Columbia has promoted a 106-per-cent increase in vaccinations for school-aged children compared with a year ago.

    B.C. Measles Outbreak Prompts Increase In Vaccinations For Kids: Health Minister

    Pediatric Society Calls For Access To Free Contraceptives For Everyone Under 25

    OTTAWA — The Canadian Paediatric Society is recommending that everyone under 25 should get confidential access to free birth control.

    Pediatric Society Calls For Access To Free Contraceptives For Everyone Under 25

    Refugee Who Lost Fingers To Frostbite Pleads With MPs Not To Pass New Asylum Law

    OTTAWA — A man from Ghana who lost all his fingers to frostbite after crossing irregularly into Manitoba is pleading with MPs not to pass new refugee rules in the government's budget bill.

    Refugee Who Lost Fingers To Frostbite Pleads With MPs Not To Pass New Asylum Law

    'Motivated By Hate.' Vandals Trash Role-Playing Business In Cape Breton

    The camp, on private property near a secluded lake southeast of Sydney, has been spray-painted with homophobic slurs, crude images and obscene insults.

    'Motivated By Hate.' Vandals Trash Role-Playing Business In Cape Breton