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Showing posts with label municipalities. Show all posts
Showing posts with label municipalities. Show all posts

Thursday, April 16, 2015

School Fined for not Allowing Muslims to Pray

Can't pray in town council meetings if you're a Christian
but you can pray in school, if you're a Muslim
Webber Academy, Calgary
In fact, God help you if you try to stop a Muslim from 
praying in school.

A private school in Calgary has been ordered by the Alberta Human Rights Commission to pay two Muslim students a total of $26,000 in damages for "distress" and "loss of dignity," after the teens were told they couldn't conduct their daily prayers on school grounds.

The two human rights complaints were filed against Webber Academy in February 2012 by Shabnam Nazar and Farhat Amir on behalf of their 14-year-old sons.

Nazer and Amir told the Alberta human rights tribunal that at first their sons prayed openly on Webber Academy school grounds with the permission of their teachers, but it didn't last.

After two-and-a-half weeks of classes, Webber Academy notified them through phone calls and a letter the prayers were against the school's non-denominational policy.

The tribunal heard the two students ended up praying outside in the winter. 

In Calgary, winter is not a trivial matter. Average January daily high temperatures are −3 °C (27 °F). And Calgary is a very windy city.

'We are a non-denominational school. We've operated on that basis for the last 18 years'
- Neil Webber, president of Webber Academy.

One of them, Naman Siddique, testified if it was too cold, he would find a nook or cranny in the school and pray in secret. He said he found it humiliating.

Siddique also told the tribunal a staff member interrupted his prayers in the school library to ask him what he was doing.

He said the experience left a "deep fear" in his heart and he still feels the need to look over his shoulder when he's praying in public spaces.

Appealing decision

Webber Academy is appealing the tribunal's decision. 

"We're not discriminating against anybody at the school on the basis of religion," said Neil Webber, the president of Webber Academy.

"We are a non-denominational school. We've operated on that basis for the last 18 years." 

I can't wait until the Supreme Court of Canada tells them they cannot prostrate themselves on school property. But, of course, that won't happen because they are not Christians. 

So, I'm expecting a large Christian prayer group to emerge in Webber Academy and to practice praying in the most obvious spot on campus.

At the tribunal, the school argued prayer that requires bowing or kneeling is "too obvious" and may make other students uncomfortable.

It said it only wants to create a learning environment that is "free of religious influences."

You'll have to move to city council chambers for that!

The human rights tribunal found otherwise.

Calgary, Alberta, Canada
"Despite the respondent's specifically state goal of making people of all religious backgrounds feel welcome, its actions, objectively viewed, were not welcoming," it wrote in its decision, saying the school discriminated against the two students.

"If you're a private school, what you should be taking from it is that the Human Rights Act applies to you," said Sarah Burton, a human right's lawyer at the Alberta Civil Liberties Research Centre in Calgary.

"I think we should watch this case. I wouldn't be surprised if it got to the Supreme Court of Canada or at least to the Alberta Court of Appeal to have some of these issues hashed out," she said.

And then the fun will start!

Supreme Court Raises Its Anti-Christian Colours

Thou shalt not pray in council chambers.

The war against Christianity has invaded Canada's highest court and they have come out unanimously on the anti-Christian side. Since none of them appear to believe in God, they seem unconcerned about offending Him or the consequences that may result from so doing. 

At least not in the form of a public recitation to open meetings, the Supreme Court of Canada ruled Wednesday, ending an eight-year legal case involving the right of city councillors in Saguenay, Que., to cross themselves and recite a 20-second Catholic prayer before official municipal business.

The unanimous decision from Canada's top court had an immediate impact across the country.

City of Halifax legal staff began reviewing its morning "invocation," which begins with the words "God our creator" and ends with "amen." 

Saguenay Council 'crossing' after prayer

Mayor Jean Tremblay of Saguenay, has argued that reciting a 20-second prayer before city council meetings respects Quebec’s Catholic heritage. The Supreme Court of Canada ruled on Wednesday that elected officials cannot open meetings with a prayer.

Ottawa's city council also dropped its morning prayer on Wednesday, as did the community of Dieppe, New Brunswick.

Both municipalities stated they would review the practice — something constitutional law expert Errol Mendes suspects many town and city councils will be doing in the days to come.

Just as the Quebec Charter of Human Rights and Freedoms, which formed the basis for the Supreme Court ruling, has a duty to ensure that no particular belief should be favoured or hindered, the court ruled that "the same holds true for non-belief."

In effect, Mendes explained, the ruling means freedom of conscience and religion includes the freedom not to observe any faith.

Saguenay Mayor Jean Tremblay
In a manner of speaking, "it's freedom from religion," he said.

Where is that in the Quebec or Canadian charter?

Applies nationwide

That should not be taken to mean that Canada is against all religion, however. Or even necessarily its public manifestation.

No, Canada is not against all religion. The Supreme Court may be against all religion, but especially Christianity. 

'The Supreme Court of Canada…represents the legal perspective across the country'
- University of Windsor law professor Richard Moon

Thank you, Pierre Trudeau, for changing us from a 'moral' society to a 'just' society. We are now ruled by laws alone, and morality be damned.

The ruling, for example, did not deal with religious icons in provincial legislatures or the prayers that open parliamentary sessions in Ottawa. And there are some legal observers who feel that some forms of public prayer and reflection would be fine as long as they are not overtly exclusive.

In essence, the ruling said "just that we welcome religions of all faiths and practices in Canada — in the private sphere," Mendes said.

Although Wednesday's decision was based on the Quebec charter, Mendes said it's implicit that the ruling applies nationwide.

University of Windsor law professor Richard Moon, whose work on freedom of religion was cited as part of the Supreme Court decision, said the same provisions under the Quebec charter would be reflected in the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms anyway.

"When the Supreme Court of Canada makes a determination, even when it relates only to a particular circumstance of the Quebec charter, the fact is it represents the legal perspective across the country," Moon said.

The right-to-pray matter began in 2007, when Sagenuay resident Alain Simoneau, an atheist, first filed a complaint with the Quebec Human Rights Tribunal about elected officials praying in council chambers before meetings.

Mayor Jean Tremblay, a devout Catholic, was ordered to cease the practice. He instead appealed the decision to the Quebec Court of Appeal, which ruled in his favour in 2011.

Simoneau bumped the case up to the Supreme Court of Canada, which agreed last year to hear it.

Parliament possibly exempt

In its decision on Wednesday, the court ruled that the recitation of the prayer infringed on freedom of religion rights by "profess[ing] one religion to the exclusion of all others."

A "neutral public space," the ruling said, must be "free from coercion…and is intended to protect every person's freedom and dignity."

Where is the 'coercion'? Is there a demand that Simoneau recite the prayer? Was someone holding a gun to his head or a knife to his throat? This isn't Islam!

While the city of Saguenay argued that even the House of Commons holds a prayer before its sessions, the court reasoned that such proceedings are likely subject to parliamentary privilege.

So, parliamentary privilege supersedes the law. Don't municipal councils have any privileges? 

Tremblay and the city of Saguenay have been ordered to pay Simoneau $33,200 in compensatory damages, punitive damages and costs.

What wasn't ruled upon in this case, however, was Simoneau's original demand for the removal of religious iconography such as a crucifix and a Sacred Heart statue from Saguenay's council chambers.

A crucifix above the Speaker's chair in the Quebec National Assembly has been described by some politicians more as a symbol of Quebec's heritage, not an item representing Christian faith. The cross was installed in 1936 by the order of then-premier Maurice Duplessis. (CBC)

Diana Ginn, who teaches a course on law and religion at Dalhousie University's Schulich School of Law, noted that the symbols were not covered in the Supreme Court decision because the original tribunal judgment focused only on the prayer issue.

"Therefore, it had to be set aside for this case," she said. "But there's nothing to stop somebody from bringing a complaint against the Sacred Heart."

A crucifix still overlooks the speaker's throne in the Quebec National Assembly, though politicians including former Quebec Premier Pauline Marois have argued it is a cultural symbol, not a religious article.

"This balance of how do you find the line between what's a reflection of the history of a place, and what's an expression of religion that's allowable in the face of state neutrality is going to lead to a lot of discussion," Ginn said.

Public prayer not fully banned

Wednesday's ruling doesn't mean praying is strictly banned in any kind of public-service context.

"There is no complete ban on prayer," said Gilles Levasseur, a law professor at the University of Ottawa.

"You can still have a statement that encompasses everybody, or invites reflection from people for their own beliefs." 

Levasseur said. "The key thing is the wording. It might not be a 'prayer,' maybe it's something generic. Maybe it's a 'recital' — some time to reflect on goodness of society and what we need to do to improve the wellbeing of our society," he said.

So, it's OK to pray as long as you don't pray to Anyone. That's atheism, and that's promoting one religion (atheism) above all others. Someone should sue!

Mendes suggested another workaround.

"How about a moment of silence? Atheists can still reflect on what the meaning of life is. It could be an alternative," he said.

"A moment of silence can also just be a moment of reflection. I think even those who don't believe in any religion can probably get behind that."

He's right, of course. It is the best 'workaround' for the current situation, unless someone believes 'silence' is a religion.