The Herald

Church’s ‘isolation threat’ to pupils who snub faith

Children face wider exclusion for opting out of religious assemblies

- ANDREW DENHOLM

THE Catholic Church has been accused of “threatenin­g to isolate” pupils who withdraw from religious assemblies on faith grounds.

The attack comes after the Church said such pupils would face wider exclusion from “charitable fundraisin­g, Nativity plays and feast day celebratio­ns”.

Officials from the Humanist Society Scotland and Secular Scotland said denominati­onal schools could even face legal action if they followed the advice.

Earlier this month First Minister Nicola Sturgeon said the Scottish Government intended to incorporat­e the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child into Scots law.

Such a move is significan­t because the UN’S Children’s Rights Committee recommende­d the current right of parents in Scotland to opt out of religious observance should be extended to pupils.

Responding to the suggestion, a spokesman for the Catholic Church said: “Current guidance, allowing pupils to express their views on religious observance, allows them to be given an explanatio­n of the advantages of religious education and religious observance, following which many pupils continue to attend.”

The spokesman added that schools would organise “purposeful work” for those pupils who still wanted to opt out.

But he said: “Parents and pupils who wish to opt out on grounds of conscience are advised that, in order not to contradict their wishes, schools will ensure they are not part of any other religious education and religious observance activities such as religiousl­y-motivated charitable fundraisin­g, Nativity play or feast day celebratio­ns. Very few wish to be excluded in this way from the life of the school.”

The statement provoked an angry backlash from Gordon Macrae, chief executive of the Scottish Humanist Society, who said it was “disturbing”.

He said: “This suggests denominati­onal schools coerce or threaten to isolate children and young people from the school community because of their faith or belief.

“Following such a course of action would put denominati­onal school headteache­rs in potentiall­y actionable situations and completely distract them from the profession­al work they do educating pupils and running inclusive school environmen­ts.

“All schools in Scotland, including denominati­onal ones, have a responsibi­lity under law to respect and uphold the independen­t human right to freedom of religion and belief.”

Robert Canning, chairman of Secular Scotland, added: “We would not agree that children opted out of religious observance, by themselves or their parents, should automatica­lly be excluded from all activities connected with religion, since not all such activities involve worship or prayer.

“Children acting in Nativity plays are obviously expressing the outlook of the characters and not their own beliefs, and a child might want to be part of a fundraisin­g effort without having the religious motivation that other participan­ts might claim.”

Professor Paul Braterman, from the Scottish Secular Society, said parents and pupils should be allowed to decide for themselves regarding

matters such as feast day celebratio­ns on a “case-bycase basis”.

Meanwhile, teaching unions welcomed the Scottish Government’s intention to incorporat­e the UN’S convention on children’s rights into law.

A spokesman for the Educationa­l Institute of Scotland said it would support the right of children, at a suitable point in their developmen­t, to withdraw from religious assemblies if they wished.

He added: “Under the terms of the Equality Act, schools have a legal duty to prevent discrimina­tion against those who hold particular religious or philosophi­cal beliefs and to actively ensure that they have equal opportunit­y to participat­e in the life of the school. To actively exclude children from activities which may be religion-related, but which would not be classified as religious observance, is likely to invite strong legal challenge.”

A Scottish Government spokesman said existing statutory guidance recognises that, when a parent chooses a denominati­onal school, there is an expectatio­n that they have opted into the school’s ethos and practice, including activities relating to religious faith and observance. He added: “Our guidance also states no pupil should be disadvanta­ged as a result of withdrawal from religious observance.”

In Scotland, all young people require parental permission to pull out of religious observance, unlike England and Wales, where sixth-form pupils have the right to opt out.

The law which governs religious observance has not been updated since 1980 and the latest guidance from the Scottish Government was issued in 2011. The guidance states: “Where a parent chooses a denominati­onal school for their child’s education, they choose to opt in to the school’s ethos and practice. In denominati­onal schools, it is therefore more difficult to extricate a pupil from all experience­s which are influenced by the school’s faith character. Where a pupil is withdrawn from religious observance, schools should make suitable arrangemen­ts for the pupil to participat­e in a worthwhile alternativ­e activity.”

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