Lethbridge Herald

Protest marks one-year anniversar­y of Bill 21

- Ugo Giguere THE CANADIAN PRESS — MONTREAL

Opponents of Quebec’s controvers­ial secularism law vowed Sunday to keep up the fight to see it rescinded ahead of the first anniversar­y of its passing.

Some of those opposed to the legislatio­n gathered in front of Premier Francois Legault’s office in downtown Montreal to denounce Bill 21 as it is known, a law they associate with systemic discrimina­tion.

The legislatio­n — which is the subject of several legal challenges — bars some public-sector employees deemed to be in positions of authority from wearing religious symbols while at work such as turbans, kippas and hijabs.

That group includes teachers, police officers and judges.

Organizers noted the anniversar­y comes in the midst of a pandemic creating an unpreceden­ted health, social and economic crisis as well a major call to denounce the racism and violence within institutio­ns.

They called on the Quebec government to move away from policies that divide and move to unite the population for the challenges to come.

“It’s one year too many,” said Hanadi Saad.

For activists who took the microphone on Sunday — a large number of them women — the law is first and foremost another symptom of the systemic racism that exists in Quebec society.

“Law 21 does not protect Quebec’s identity, it was created to make religious and racial profiling, particular­ly towards women, especially Muslim women,” Saad said.

Ehab Lotayef, the co-ordinator of a campaign against Bill 21, made a link with Legault’s recent assertion that while racism does exist in the province, systemic racism does not.

“The premier denies the existence of systemic racism and at the time he is legalizing systemic discrimina­tion,” Lotayef said.

“The fight of rights and equality is not for a certain group and not against a certain group, we are not equal unless we are all equal.”

The Coalition Avenir Quebec government has previously defended the secularism law, saying it enjoys strong support among Quebecers and has described it as moderate.

The government invoked closure to adopt the secularism law on June 16, 2019.

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