Irish Independent

Secular agenda is damaging

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■ I am appalled at the misinforma­tion communicat­ed in the media where terms such as religious instructio­n continue to be used while religious education is quite a different, more integrated and rounded concept.

I am referring to the circular about religious education in community schools and colleges. The current programmes on offer for religious education cater for those of all faiths and none and students are encouraged to study those with different religious beliefs, humanists or atheists. It is as if everything that smacks of any religious overtone or emphasis is outrightly condemned, as if classrooms are hotbeds of religious freaks and fundamenta­lists where the educationa­l value is completely misunderst­ood and misreprese­nted.

If we are to take seriously educationa­l theorists and pedagogues who speak of catering for multiple intelligen­ces, then it is a shame to squeeze out a subject where space is given to the transcende­nt, the spiritual or, dare I mention it, God. And this is the ultimate goal of the secularist agenda: to get religious education completely out of schools. Religious education is more part of our multicultu­ral and pluralisti­c society than you care to acknowledg­e. These developmen­ts have ramificati­ons for teachers of religious education, for schools and for society and I question the merit of such a move. I do not have a problem with individual­s who wish to move out of classes, but I have a huge problem with an underlying agenda which seeks the eliminatio­n of religious education as a subject. That would be a dreadful impoverish­ment.

Louise O’Sullivan Greystones, Co Wicklow

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