Close X
Sunday, November 24, 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

    Prince Edward Island Woman Facing Third Charge Of Infanticide: Police

    Prince Edward Island Woman Facing Third Charge Of Infanticide: Police
    CHARLOTTETOWN — A Prince Edward Island woman who admitted to causing the deaths of two infants is now facing a third charge of infanticide.

    Prince Edward Island Woman Facing Third Charge Of Infanticide: Police

    Calgary Police Say Bodies Of Missing Mother And Daughter Found

    Police say they have found the bodies of a Calgary woman and her toddler daughter who disappeared last month. Investigators say a suspect, who was earlier questioned in the case, has been taken into custody and charges are pending.  

    Calgary Police Say Bodies Of Missing Mother And Daughter Found

    Indian Exchange Student Drowns In Kamloops River, RCMP Recover Body

    Kamloops RCMP say the body of a 23-year-old Indian exchange student has been recovered after the man was swept away in the North Thompson River on Friday morning.

    Indian Exchange Student Drowns In Kamloops River, RCMP Recover Body

    Former Liberal MP Darshan Kang Apologizes For Harassment, Insists Intentions Were 'Honourable'

    Former Liberal MP Darshan Kang Apologizes For Harassment, Insists Intentions Were 'Honourable'
    But reading from a prepared statement, Darshan Kang also maintains that neither his intention nor his actions were improper.

    Former Liberal MP Darshan Kang Apologizes For Harassment, Insists Intentions Were 'Honourable'

    Major Housing Development Planned On Indigenous Land In Heart Of Vancouver

    Major Housing Development Planned On Indigenous Land In Heart Of Vancouver
    The Squamish Nation councillor, who also goes by the name Dustin Rivers, is standing on a pinched triangle of reserve land near the city's centre that the First Nation won back in 2002 after decades of legal battles.

    Major Housing Development Planned On Indigenous Land In Heart Of Vancouver

    Systemic Change Needed To Address Suicide Among Physicians In Canada: Doctors

    Tulk, who completed her residency in family medicine at McMaster University in Hamilton saw a system that was failing resilient people wired to succeed through hard work and a competitive drive — before they became victims of burnout.

    Systemic Change Needed To Address Suicide Among Physicians In Canada: Doctors