Lethbridge Herald

Hijabs and kippahs dominate Que. politics

- THE CANADIAN PRESS — QUEBEC

The leader of Quebec’s official opposition broke legislativ­e rules Thursday by wearing a Parti Quebecois lapel pin and then compared it to the Jewish head cap worn by a member in the chamber the day prior to commemorat­e the Holocaust.

Jean-Francois Lisee’s words triggered a heated exchange in the national assembly that reflected the current level of debate in Quebec on the issue of religious symbols in the civil service.

Also on Thursday, a Montreal newspaper reported that a 17-year-old Muslim girl studying to become a police officer wants to eventually wear her religious head scarf on the job.

That prompted another opposition party, Coalition Avenir Quebec, to announce during question period that police officers in uniform cannot serve the state and God at the same time.

The exchanges are part of a long-running debate in Quebec over how to manage religious accommodat­ion requests by public employees, including teachers, judges and prison guards.

And the issue is surely to remain a major topic of discussion ahead of the Oct. 1 provincial election.

David Birnbaum, a Liberal member of the legislatur­e, said he wore his Jewish kippah in the legislatur­e Wednesday for Holocaust Remembranc­e Day, a 24-hour period where Jews remember the millions slaughtere­d by the Nazis during the Second World War.

“I wore it with solidarity with survivors but also on the understand­ing that wearing that kippah in Quebec today, I could do so without an ounce of fear,” he said in an interview.

“And with the understand­ing that I could aspire to any job whatsoever in Quebec.”

All three opposition parties, to differing degrees, want to limit civil servants wearing conspicuou­s religious symbols on the job in order to preserve the secular nature of the Quebec state.

The governing Liberals, however, say state employees should be able to wear religious clothing on the job as long as their faces are uncovered.

Lisee stood wearing his party’s lapel pin and was asked to remove it by the Speaker because it broke rules stating partisan symbols are not permitted in the legislatur­e.

Lisee took the pin off and said all citizens should be “equal in our displays of our conviction­s.”

“I am OK with the member who wore a kippah yesterday (but) we should also be allowed to display our political conviction­s,” he said.

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