Quebec, tolerance and the crucifix - The Globe and Mail
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/commentary/editorials/quebec-tolerance-and-the-crucifix/article12205442/
As the Quebec Court of Appeal said in the Saguenay case, in which a
Quebec resident, Alain Simoneau, objected to a non-sectarian, 20-second
prayer and the religious symbols, the “difficult and delicate question”
of the state’s neutrality doesn’t require “that society be cleansed of
all denominational reality, including that which falls within its
cultural history.” The symbols, displayed for decades at Saguenay City
Hall, are seen by most people as historical artifacts, the three judges
on the appeal-court panel said.
The protection of these symbols
should be seen as promoting tolerance and accommodation of religious
minorities such as Jews, Muslims and Sikhs. Each community has been
involved in flashpoints. The National Assembly barred four men wearing
kirpans from hearings on accommodation. The previous Liberal government
passed a law limiting the right of Muslim women to wear face veils while
obtaining government services.
Quebec shouldn’t try to have it
both ways. If the province has a right to exclusively Christian
religious symbols in government buildings because, in essence, it has
always been thus, Quebec shouldn’t deny to non-Christians the right to
wear religious garb or symbols in those buildings. Complete “neutrality”
does not exist in Quebec or the broader Canadian context – the very
first line of the Canadian Charter of Rights invokes “the supremacy of
God.” Like God and the crucifix, accommodation has a long cultural
history in Quebec and the rest of Canada.
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