Catholic Civil Rights League Weighs in on Québec Religious Education Court Challenges

The Catholic Civil Rights League is weighing in this week on the continuing legal storm surrounding a controversial new ethics and religion course introduced by the Québec government in September, 2008. Parents in Drummondville and Granby are fighting the mandatory course, arguing the new curriculum attacks parental rights. The course in question replaces Catholic, evangelical and non-sectarian moral instruction in elementary and secondary schools with more inclusive, secularized instruction. Both the Drummondville and Granby cases are before the Québec Superior Court this week. The League is issuing its support for parental rights, and specifically for the right of parents to choose the religious education of their children. As the League President Phil Horgan notes: “Freedom of religion is a fundamental right both in the federal and Québec Charters of Rights and Freedoms. (Catholic) Church teaching and tradition is that parents are the first educators of their children. This right is also spelled out in Article 26 of the UN’s Universal Declaration of Human Rights. By insisting that this new course replace religious training in public schools, and not even allowing exemptions or other accommodations, the Ministry of Education is denying an essential aspect of religious freedom and parental rights in its public schools.”

Public date: May 14th, 2009
Categories: News
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