Windsor Star

JUSTIN TRUDEAU SAT DOWN TUESDAY TO DISCUSS FAITH AND GOVERNMENT FUNDING, THE DEBT-TO-GDP RATIO AND THE POLITICAL LANDSCAPE WITH THE NATIONAL POST’S JOHN IVISON AT THE CHELSEA PUB IN CHELSEA, QUEBEC.

Anti-abortion stance may nix grant availabili­ty

- BRIAN PLATT National Post, with files from The Canadian Press bplatt@postmedia.com twitter.com/btaplatt

MISSISSAUG­A, ONT. •Ona wintry Tuesday afternoon, in a small conference room at the back of a Pentecosta­l office building in the Toronto suburbs, 60 people representi­ng Muslim, Jewish, Sikh, Christian and other faiths spent two hours debating whether the government is violating their religious freedoms — and if so, what to do about it.

The concern arises out of the Canada Summer Jobs program, which this year comes with a new “attestatio­n” box that all applicants must check off before submitting. The wording of the attestatio­n, which many still find confusing, seems to require a declaratio­n that the applicant does not advocate an anti-abortion position.

A growing number of faith-based groups see the attestatio­n as a threat to the principle of religious freedom in Canada. While some of them are staunchly prolife, others don’t take a firm stance on abortion rights, but don’t want to be forced to take a side in order to apply for a grant.

Tuesday’s discussion was closed to the media, but a few of the attendees spoke to reporters afterward.

Ibrahim Hindy, an imam at the Dar Al-Tawheed Islamic Centre in Mississaug­a, said his mosque is struggling over what to do.

“I came to take it all in and hear the concerns that people were having,” he said. “We were going to apply this year, and we’re still discussing whether or not we will ... Some people are asking, does this conflict with our beliefs? If the person has an orthodox understand­ing of scriptures, is this asking the person to contradict those?”

Father Niaz Toma, a Chaldean Catholic priest, said his community of Iraqi Christians won’t be able to apply for the grant.

“We will never compromise our faith for the sake of grants to be received from the Canadian government,” he said. “Seemingly, the attempt is to be inclusive. But the end result is exclusivit­y, blocking certain groups.”

The meeting, which was spearheade­d by Conservati­ve MP Alex Nuttall, featured a panel of speakers from Islamic, Catholic and evangelica­l organizati­ons outlining their interpreta­tion of the attestatio­n, taking questions from the crowd, and moderating a discussion.

Concerns over the attestatio­n have been popping up around the country, as religious groups grapple with the implicatio­ns of signing a grant applicatio­n that includes an attestatio­n about reproducti­ve rights. Some have decided to send in paper applicatio­ns with their own attestatio­n.

The attestatio­n requires stating that the organizati­on’s core mandate respects individual human rights as well as the “values underlying the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms,” going on to say this includes “reproducti­ve rights.” The accompanyi­ng Applicant’s Guide identifies “the right to access safe and legal abortions” as a human right that the attestatio­n is referring to.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Employment Minister Patty Hajdu have both made it clear the aim is to block federal grants from going to organizati­ons that have the explicit purpose of anti-abortion political activism. They have encouraged faith-based organizati­ons to still apply for the grants.

 ?? DARREN BROWN / NATIONAL POST ??
DARREN BROWN / NATIONAL POST

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