Montreal Gazette

‘It is time to stop denying racism’ in Quebec, say groups against bill

-

Groups opposed to the Legault government’s proposed law on state secularism wasted no time Friday skewering the plan as “racist,” saying it presumes that only a heterosexu­al white male can be impartial and lays the groundwork for veiled Muslim women to suffer “daily violence” if it is adopted. Bill 21 would ban the wearing of religious symbols by some Quebec government employees, including police officers, prison guards and elementary and high-school teachers. Safa Chebbi, of the Table de concertati­on contre le racisme systémique, described the proposed law as clearly racist. “It is time to stop denying racism. The negation of racism or Islamophob­ia is a denial of a reality faced by many Quebecers,” she said Friday. “And if we have reached this point it’s because Islamophob­ia has become strident and acceptable in our society.” Hers was among seven groups, including Amnesty Internatio­nal and the province’s main women’s federation, that attacked the secularism bill as discrimina­tory at a news conference Friday. Their news conference came shortly after Montreal Mayor Valérie Plante said she had received hateful messages after speaking out publicly against Bill 21. “I’m a politician, it’s part of my job, but the messages I’ve received since yesterday are appalling,” Plante told reporters at city hall. “It’s very frontal, very aggressive, even very violent at times.” Plante said she is concerned people who wear religious symbols will become targets. “I’m concerned for the children in the schoolyard who feel judged because their mother wears a head scarf,” she said. Also Friday, the National Council of Canadian Muslims and the Canadian Civil Liberties Associatio­n said they intend to fight “by every means available” the bill introduced by the Quebec government on Thursday. The two groups said they strongly oppose the bill and could take legal action. They said the bill discrimina­tes against minority groups. “Bill 21 ... effectivel­y targets and discrimina­tes against religious minorities, including in particular those individual Muslims, Jews and Sikhs who wear a religious symbol as part of their faith,” CCLA equality director Noa Mendelsohn Aviv said in a statement. NCCM executive director Ihsaan Gardee said the bill was introduced without consultati­on with impacted communitie­s. “If this bill becomes law, Quebec Muslims will be facing a very different set of circumstan­ces and socio-economic prospects than those around them,” Gardee said. “Quebec is a democratic, progressiv­e and inclusive society; yet this bill is regressive and squarely against these core values.” The proposed law includes the use of the notwithsta­nding clauses in the Quebec and Canadian charters to override religious rights. It includes an acquired-rights clause that would allow existing employees to continue to wear symbols such as the hijab, kippah or turban as long as they continue to hold the job they had on the day the bill was introduced. Immigratio­n Minister Simon Jolin-Barrette said Thursday that the government believes it has found the correct approach. France-Isabelle Langlois, Amnesty Internatio­nal’s director for French-speaking Canada, said the bill contravene­s the Universal Declaratio­n of Human Rights, which guarantees freedom of thought, conscience and religion. Idil Issa, vice-president of the Fondation Parole de femmes, which represents women from visible minorities, said Muslim women wearing the hijab will bear the brunt of the law’s impact. “Veiled Muslim women are very visible and very identifiab­le,” she said. “And (they) will suffer, along with the loss of their jobs or career opportunit­ies, violence and stigmatiza­tion on a daily basis if this law passes.”

 ?? GRaHAM HUGHES/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? From left, Safa Chebbi, Marlihan Lopez and Idil Issa oppose what they see as discrimina­tory legislatio­n.
GRaHAM HUGHES/THE CANADIAN PRESS From left, Safa Chebbi, Marlihan Lopez and Idil Issa oppose what they see as discrimina­tory legislatio­n.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada