Calgary Herald

Xenophobes trampling charter rights in Quebec

- NAOMI LAKRITZ NAOMI LAKRITZ IS A HERALD COLUMNIST. NLAKRITZ@CALGARYHER­ALD.COM

The Parti Quebecois is turning Quebec into a xenophobic hellhole where the charter rights of Canadian citizens to freedom of religion and freedom of expression are about to be revoked.

Meanwhile, the federal government, which should be protecting those citizens’ rights, is sitting idly by, contenting itself with making vague noises about this not being Ottawa’s problem.

The Quebec government has confirmed it wants to pass legislatio­n that will prohibit all public-sector workers — in daycares, hospitals, schools, police forces, courthouse­s and throughout the civil service — from wearing any religious clothing or symbols. The reason, as Premier Pauline Marois explained last year, is to preserve “our identity, our language, our institutio­ns and our values.”

Premier Marois, if your “values” involve legislatin­g how your citizens can dress, then your values leave much to be desired. Let’s hope those citizens turf you out en masse in the next election and your arrogant, despicable, xenophobic party goes down in disgrace.

How the wearing of religious symbols by individual­s going about their daily routine prevents French culture from flourishin­g is beyond comprehens­ion. I wonder just what values Marois is referring to. Supposedly, Quebec’s values are the Judeo-Christian ones that the rest of North America runs on. If so, why should Marois care if someone from the Judeo side of those values wears his kippah to work? Or are the separatist­s’ values exclusiona­ry ones that cast everyone but French Quebecers into a category called The Other, which must be feared and hated?

And how does forbidding a Muslim daycare worker from wearing her hijab preserve Quebec’s identity, language, etc.? Is Marois afraid the children might see the hijab, and realize there are other people in the world who are different from them? Is she afraid these children just might learn to respect other people’s difference­s and not grow up to be a bunch of xenophobes like the current government?

Yet, the PQ has the gall to call this religious “accommodat­ion.” True accommodat­ion is allowing people to wear whatever they want — the way it should be in a democracy. Surely, the foundation­s of democratic society are strong enough that they can withstand a member of that society wearing a kippah on his head or a crucifix around her neck.

No, this is not about values or any of the other highflown words the PQ may toss around. It’s about discrimina­tion and hate. One appalling example illustrate­s it: Bernard Drainville holds the title of minister responsibl­e for democratic institutio­ns and active citizenshi­p in the Quebec government, a portfolio which, if Orwell were alive, he’d be kicking himself for not including in his novel, 1984.

Last spring, Drainville got angry because the Montreal borough of Cote-des-Neiges-Notre-Dame-de-Grace, which has a sizable Jewish population, makes a point of not ticketing cars that are parked on the streets around synagogues on the Jewish high holidays.

Drainville represents the riding of Marie-Victorin, which is on the south side of the St. Lawrence River, across from Montreal proper, in a distant neighbourh­ood that includes the city of Longueuil. Cote-des-Neiges-Notre-Dame-de-Grace is not in his riding.

Why a provincial politician should concern himself about a municipal parking policy in a riding not his own is more than passing strange. On the high holidays, which occur in the autumn, Jewish people attend synagogue a total of three days and two evenings. When a provincial politician gets hot under the collar about where Jews park their cars a few days out of the year, the optics reek of anti-Semitism. Drainville may be interested to know that Montreal’s Shearith Israel synagogue was establishe­d in 1768, and that records of a Jewish presence in the province go back 30 years before that. Jews are Quebecers as much as any francophon­e is.

Last spring, Drainville told Le Devoir that “if we want to be able to properly manage this diversity, we will have to give ourselves rules and common values.” The notion of “managing” diversity has echoes of other regimes in other times which also found ways to “manage” diversity, many of them highly unpleasant, and frequently fatal to the diversity who found themselves being managed.

The federal government, possibly fretting about its fortunes in Quebec in the next election, has shrugged off the matter as one of provincial jurisdicti­on.

Meanwhile, Drainville says the new law provides “a good balance between respect for individual rights and the respect of Quebecers’ common values.” What a joke. There is no respect for individual rights; when you legislate how citizens may dress, you’ve killed off individual rights.

If the legislatio­n passes, public-sector workers should ignore it. They should continue to wear their religious symbols to work. If they are fined, which one assumes would be the method of enforcemen­t the law would propose — since surely even the rabid dogs of the PQ would not make jail an option — they should refuse to pay.

The federal government needs to stop walking on eggshells around Quebec. The Tories must take their eyes off the ballot box. Forget the Orange Crush and squelch this intolerabl­e crushing of charter rights.

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