Quote:
Originally Posted by Kilgore Trout
Bill 21 would have more credibility if it didn't consider Christianity to be "cultural heritage," thereby allowing public schools to retain their giant crosses and saint's names, and of course public holidays that enshrine Christian traditions like Easter, Christmas and St-Jean-Baptiste (conveniently renamed la fête nationale).
There's a difference between laïcité and catho-laïcité.
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I mean yes and no. It doesn't really have to be credible. Probably the biggest aim is for immigrants who want to come to Canada for economic reasons only but bring their own culture will choose somewhere other than Canada. There are numerous teachers for example who have moved from Gatineau to Ottawa system because of this. It's heralded in English Canada but the idea it's a universal good is questionable.
We are a christian heritage country. It is confusing because we are next to an actual christian country but Christmas and Easter are very important to Canada. The idea Ramadan or Diwali are on the same level is ridiculous. Most of the non-religous immigrants I know also get a christmas tree and exchange gifts. Because it is no longer religous.
Not to mention the Judeo-Christian placing the individual at the forefront of rights are the core of who we are even if Quebec is the most collectivist part of Canada.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Acajack
Bill 21 and the approach to laïcité was meant to place a line in the sand when it comes to the presence of religions in the public sphere and institutions.
Obviously something like this is going to impact the fastest-growing religions most. Which here and most everywhere in the world happens to be Islam right now.
In the same way that federal anti-smoking campaigns back in the day impacted francophones more than most other demographics, because we tended to smoke a lot more.
Now, one question that could be asked is whether we'd have had a Bill 21 if the fast-growing religion had been Christian? The immediate cynical answer from many in the ROC would be "of course not", but my guess is that if you had US-style evangelical Christianity growing fast and becoming influential in Quebec, with its backward attitudes towards women and sexuality, that there would also have been considerable pushback as well.
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Interesting and fair analogy. But a lot of it isn't about religion at all. Quebec can't ban cooking curry in apartment buildings and the like but there is a discomfort with lack of integration (assimilation more generally). The law has a general anti-multicularism aspect to it in line with some politics from France.