a) Are you really suggesting we guide ourselves by what happened in the 1600s? Did the idea of a division between church and state even exist then? Even still, wasn't it the Puritans themselves who established the idea of separating state and religion within the early colonies so that people of all religions could settle and live/work together yet still feel safe and secure in their own religious practises? I'm sure accommodations had to be made, no?
b) Many people who came to North America did so because they wanted to leave the old ways behind and be part of something new. Yes, there are those who simply fled for their lives or livelihoods but should we be compromising our values for those who are here through necessity rather than by choice? I don't think so.
c) The issue is not with religion. It's with religion in a public school system where it doesn't belong.
Sorry, my point wasn't clear. I was being a little obtuse just for the fun of it and it rightfully went wooosh!
I just think it is funny for us to criticize people for coming here with a set of values they don't want to change. Because that is the history of 'western' civilization in this part of the world.
Last I checked, white Euro-oriented Anglo Saxon society, social structure, institutions and values weren't here when the first of us arrived. That means that...wait for it...the history of Canada was built by people coming over and not changing their beliefs, their practices and their norms and imposing them on others. Call me when we're having this discussion in Ouendat.
I agree, but it is the curriculum that assimilates. Creating ethnic/religious cliques within the system is not helpful to this at all.
Yes, and having these kids in public school learning the curriculum is what will help them assimilate.
Being so inflexible that we can't let them out for an hour (or less) to pray on a Friday will drive many of them into a religious-oriented education outside of the system where they will do exactly what you don't want them to do - not learn the curriculum, and not integrate into society.
How many Muslim friends do you have? Then compare them to how many Amish friends you have. Then you'll get it. Which path do you want Canadian Muslims to take?
... but changes and accommodations are being made! We no longer recite the Lord's Prayer in the public school system, for example. It is no longer acceptable to preach or proselytize in any way within the school system... and public-funded faith-based religion was soundly rejected in Ontario by people of all groups, religions and ethnic communities. It is probably only a matter of time before the the situation with the Catholic school board is changed.
Not espousing a single religion isn't much of an accommodation for those that practice another. Last I checked, we still don't have school on Xmas and Good Friday and Easters, but not Yom Kippur or Ramadan.
(PS - Religious education wasn't soundly rejected considering that 32 percent of voters voted for the party espousing religious education in public schools and more than 90 percent of voters voted for a party that supported some form of religious education in schools. FYI I'm not in favour of it at all, just correcting your assumption.)
Accommodations and changes are happening but happily they point to a direction which takes religion out of the system rather than inviting it in. All groups have had to accommodate themselves to this, including the muslims.
The system isn't taking in religion in any way. Nothing is being done within the school system. This is a complete red herring.
The school is letting a group of students out of class on Friday to pray and facilitating it by giving them a place to do it in the school so they can return to class as soon as possible. Just like they would do for drama, hockey, music, family matters, and any other aspect of student life.
No one is getting religion in the curriculum, no one is asking that something being taught be changed, the board isn't espousing any religious viewpoints yay or nay, the teachers aren't teaching anything, no one who is Muslim or is not into praying is being asked to do it. Nothing religious is going on here within the system.
The board is simply recognizing a need for accommodation and doing it in such a way as to keep these religious kids within the system. Just like we do for countless other kids for countless other reasons. Isn't that what we all want? Isn't that the end goal?
If this were a bunch of Dutch Calvinists in Flamborough or Jews in Thornhill or Mormons in wherever we wouldn't even be discussing it.