The Mail on Sunday

Hallelujah!

Equalities watchdog says persecutio­n of Christians must end – and blasts Lord’s Prayer film ban

- By Jonathan Petre RELIGIOUS AFFAIRS CORRESPOND­ENT

Ministers won’t back cross-ban Christians

Archbishop: Ministers’ PC Christmas cards ‘erode Christiani­ty’ ‘Bonkers’ police drop the word Christmas from poster

THE Government’s equalities watchdog has hit out at politicall­y correct public bodies and employers who victimise Christians because they fear offending others.

The Equality and Human Rights Commission (EHRC) is to publish a major new report next week, seen by The Mail on Sunday, criticisin­g overzealou­s organisati­ons that unnecessar­ily drop references to Christmas or discipline believers who wear crosses at work.

The report, which highlights a string of cases first exposed by this newspaper, will:

Admonish the UK’s biggest cinema chains for banning a Church of England advertisem­ent promoting the Lord’s Prayer, and suggest legal action over the case could follow;

Support Nadia Eweida, a Christian check-in staff member at British Airways who was suspended for refusing to remove a cross on a chain;

Criticise housing associatio­n bosses who used ‘diversity’ policies to demote a Christian staff member for mild comments about gay marriage on his Facebook page;

Deride Government department­s and town halls that have airbrushed ‘Christmas’ out of seasonal greeting cards or celebratio­ns to avoid upsetting people of other beliefs.

The report follows a series of cases in which Christians have clashed with employers over their rights to express their religious beliefs. But to the fury of Christian campaigner­s, the Commission falls short of calling for reform of the controvers­ial Equalities Act 2010 it was set up to police, which bans discrimina­tion against minority groups including religious believers.

The Christian Institute said: ‘When the EHRC has to remind employers that it’s OK to celebrate Christmas, it shows how damaging the influence of the equality industry has been. No one needs to remind employers that it’s OK to celebrate gay pride. But celebratin­g Christmas? Apparently that’s dodgy ground. It’s crazy.’

But Commission chief David Isaac does lambast public bodies that rebrand their Christmas celebratio­ns with terms such as ‘Winterval’, as Birmingham did in the late 1990s – though the council pointed out that the festivitie­s did still include Christmas events.

More recently, the Department of Energy & Climate Change was criticised for urging civil servants to send out Christmas cards referring only to ‘season’s greetings’, to avoid excluding other faiths.

Mr Isaac said fear of offending and a lack of understand­ing of the law was causing ‘misinterpr­etation and confusion’, and he urged businesses to adopt ‘sensible’ approaches to such issues.

He added: ‘I want to put the record

‘Celebratin­g Christmas is dodgy ground?’

straight… you can send Christmas cards and have a Christmas party.’

Mr Isaac is particular­ly critical of last November’s ban by cinema chains on the one-minute Lord’s Prayer advert, which featured the Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby and others reciting lines from the ancient prayer.

Digital Cinema Media, the advertisin­g arm of Odeon, Cineworld and Vue, initially encouraged the U-certificat­e film, which was due to be shown before Star Wars: The Force Awakens. But then DCM suddenly pulled the plug, saying the film could offend cinema-goers and breach policy. Despite a furious backlash, it refused to back down.

Mr Isaac makes clear that legal action is still an option to clarify the law, and the Commission could initi- ate a case if approached to do so. A section in the new report says: ‘There is no right in Britain not to be offended and, in our view, respect for people’s right to express beliefs with which others might disagree, is the mark of a democratic society.

‘We are concerned that a single supplier is effectivel­y able to control a very large proportion of the market and effectivel­y impose a blanket ban on advertisin­g of a religious nature.’

But the report rejects the view of Christian campaigner­s that the law is biased and puts the rights of some minority groups such as gay people ahead of religious believers.

Citing the 2009 case of the Cornish seaside hotel owners, exclusivel­y revealed by The Mail on Sunday, who lost a court battle after refus- ing to allow a gay couple to stay in a double room saying they banned all unmarried couples, Mr Isaac said: ‘There has been a great deal of debate about the so-called hierarchy of rights. It doesn’t exist, but the courts have confirmed that when offering a commercial service, people cannot use their beliefs – religious or otherwise – to discrimina­te against others.’

The Commission does back Ms Eweida, who won her discrimina­tion case in the European Court of Human Rights in 2013 after British Airways ordered her to remove a cross she wore over her uniform.

It also backs a ruling against Trafford Housing Trust for demoting employee Adrian Smith, for saying on his personal Facebook page that gay marriage in church was ‘an equality too far’ – another exclusive in this newspaper.

The Church of England welcomed the report for saying the cinema chains ‘were wrong to ignore basic rights on the freedom of religion’.

But former Archbishop of Canterbury Lord Carey said Mr Isaac was ‘ignoring the fact that there is currently a competitio­n of rights and no one knows where they stand’.

The Christian Legal Centre added: ‘In the last year we’ve seen doctors, nurses, social workers, registrars and university students discipline­d or sacked for sharing their Christian faith. The EHRC still has a woeful understand­ing of what it truly means to be a believing Christian.’

DCM declined to comment.

THE Equality and Human Rights Commission (EHRC) deserves praise for roundly condemning some foolish recent attempts to weaken or isolate Christians and Christiani­ty in this country.

Many of the cases it highlights – cinemas banning a Church advertisem­ent featuring the Lord’s Prayer, employers who discipline­d workers for expressing conservati­ve moral views, officials shy of using the word ‘Christmas’ because of imaginary fears it might offend someone – were first raised by The Mail on Sunday.

But in fact the EHRC offers Christiani­ty no more protection than it gives to any other faith. And many who still regard this as a Christian country rather than a multicultu­ral state will wonder if this is right.

As the Odeon group’s decision to defy tradition by opening cinemas on Christmas Day shows, the Christian character of this country is increasing­ly under threat. Almost all our laws and customs originate in that faith. If we let the foundation­s crumble away, how long will the building survive?

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