Close X
Tuesday, November 19, 2024
ADVT 
National

Supreme Court Rules Quebec Infringed On School's Religious Freedom

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 19 Mar, 2015 02:35 PM

    OTTAWA — A divided Supreme Court of Canada disagreed over the subtleties, but in the end upheld the religious freedom of a historic Montreal Jesuit school to teach Catholicism in the way it chooses.

    The high court ruled Thursday that Quebec infringed on the religious freedom of Jesuit-run Loyola High School in Montreal by refusing it an exception from teaching the province's ethics and religious culture program.

    But the high court was divided by a 4-3 margin on how to resolve the clash between religious freedom and the need to follow the secular law of the province.

    A vocal minority, led by Chief Justice Beverley McLachlin, said they didn't think the majority struck the right balance between protecting freedom of religion and the need to follow the law.

    In the narrowest legal sense, the ruling grants the school's appeal so it can use its own course and teach the province's Ethics and Religious Culture or ERC program from a Catholic perspective.

    The school can now reapply to Quebec's education ministry for an exemption to teach the ERC course and that decision must be guided by Thursday's ruling.

    Paul Donovan, Loyola's principal, said the school encourages debate and discussion in its classrooms, and has educated many prominent people, politicians and clergy, since its founding in 1848.

    "We want them to know what it is they're accepting or rejecting," he said. "To say, I don't want to be a Catholic, that's up to each individual. But you got to know what you're saying no to."

    John Zucchi, the Loyola parent who was the main appellant in the case, said he didn't want to put his son "in a Catholic ghetto" by sending him to the school.

    Loyola, he said, "was completely engaged with the world," and has educated politicians and other prominent people.

    The ruling comes amid the backdrop of political, cultural and religious acrimony that has arisen in Ottawa around the issues raised by Prime Minister Stephen Harper's position that women taking the oath of citizenship should not be allowed to wear a face-covering niqab.

    The high court ruled on the issue in 2012 in a similar case in Drummondville, Quebec involving a public school.

    In that case, the Supreme Court ruled that teaching students about world religions did not infringe the rights of Catholic parents who wanted to raise their children in their faith.

    Thursday's case revolves around Quebec's law that requires schools to teach religions from a secular, cultural and morally neutral perspective in private schools.

    Under the law, schools can apply for an exemption that allows an alternative course to be taught as long as the minister of education approves it. Schools are only allowed to teach an alternative course as long as teachers steer clear of injecting their own religious beliefs.

    "To ask a religious school's teachers to discuss other religions and their ethical beliefs as objectively as possible does not seriously harm the values underlying religious freedom," wrote Justice Rosalie Abella for the majority.

    "But preventing a school like Loyola from teaching and discussing Catholicism in any part of the program from its own perspective does little to further those objectives while at the same time seriously interfering with the values underlying religious freedom."

    Loyola's exemption, the court held, "cannot be withheld on the basis that Loyola must teach Catholicism and Catholic ethics from a neutral perspective."

    However the minority opinion, penned by McLachlin and Justice Michael Moldaver, took issue with how all of this would play out in a practical sense in a classroom.

    "Requiring Loyola's teachers to maintain a neutral posture on ethical questions poses serious practical difficulties and represents a significant infringement on how Loyola transmits an understanding of the Catholic faith," they wrote.

    "The net effect would be to render them mute during large portions of the ethics."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Key dates for imprisoned Egyptian-Canadian journalist Mohamed Fahmy

    Key dates for imprisoned Egyptian-Canadian journalist Mohamed Fahmy
    Foreign Affairs Minister John Baird said in Egypt on Thursday that Canada hopes for a resolution "sooner rather than later" in the case of imprisoned Egyptian-Canadian journalist Mohamed Fahmy, who has spent more than a year behind bars in Cairo after he and two colleagues were arrested while working for news broadcaster Al Jazeera English. 

    Key dates for imprisoned Egyptian-Canadian journalist Mohamed Fahmy

    Report into troubled TDSB by provincial investigator to be released today

    Report into troubled TDSB by provincial investigator to be released today
    TORONTO — Education Minister Liz Sandals will release a report today into the troubled Toronto District School Board, where she said a "culture of fear" existed among staff.

    Report into troubled TDSB by provincial investigator to be released today

    Woman passenger dead after GO bus rollover crash northwest of Toronto

    Woman passenger dead after GO bus rollover crash northwest of Toronto
    TORONTO — A 56-year-old woman is dead following a rollover crash involving a GO Transit commuter bus northwest of Toronto.

    Woman passenger dead after GO bus rollover crash northwest of Toronto

    Supreme Court won't hear case involving lawsuit over Sydney tar ponds

    Supreme Court won't hear case involving lawsuit over Sydney tar ponds
    OTTAWA — Cape Breton residents who launched a class-action lawsuit claiming the Sydney tar ponds exposed them to contaminants will not have their case heard by the Supreme Court of Canada.

    Supreme Court won't hear case involving lawsuit over Sydney tar ponds

    Baloney Meter: does Canada's refugee policy discriminate against Syrian Muslims?

    Baloney Meter: does Canada's refugee policy discriminate against Syrian Muslims?
    OTTAWA — "(The government is) being very discriminatory when it comes to whom they are bringing in, and very reticent when it comes to allowing Muslim refugees to come to Canada, and that's an issue." — Paul Dewar, NDP foreign affairs critic.

    Baloney Meter: does Canada's refugee policy discriminate against Syrian Muslims?

    Supreme Court won't hear case of man who sued parents, Mormon church over rites

    Supreme Court won't hear case of man who sued parents, Mormon church over rites
    OTTAWA — The Supreme Court of Canada will not hear the case of a Montreal man who sought damages from his parents and the Mormon church over religious rites which he said caused him serious mental problems.

    Supreme Court won't hear case of man who sued parents, Mormon church over rites