The Scotsman

Scotland rediscover­s its sectarian shame

Sir Billy Connolly is right to warn that religious bigotry is holding Scotland back

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e need to put sectariani­sm in the dustbin of history. Scotland must play a full part in Europe and the global economy, so we cannot allow ourselves to be dragged down by the dead weight of religious hatred and sectarian bigotry.”

In 2002, the then First Minister Jack Mcconnell gave a landmark speech that was credited with putting “Scotland’s shame” in the spotlight and, by that simple act, helping to drive it out of Scottish society. One sceptic later claimed that sectariani­sm had been “dying anyway” and there was “nothing like creating an issue to get rid of it”.

Sixteen years later, both the optimism and scepticism about Mcconnell’s contributi­on to the debate seem decidedly misplaced. Sectariani­sm is still very much with us.

Sir Billy Connolly is perhaps uniquely placed to understand just how much is lost by religious bigotry, given he is loved by people on both sides of the divide.

In his new book, Made in Scotland, the 75-year-old Glaswegian comedy legend says it would be “lovely to think, in 2018, that the hatred between Rangers and Celtic, between Protestant and Catholic, had all evaporated into the ether. There was a movement against it a few years ago, a kind of anti-bigotry movement, but it seems to have fizzled out and it didn’t really come to anything… I don’t understand how we’re ever going to get rid of the bigotry – it seems bottomless. I am just grateful that I have always got along well with Glaswegian­s as a whole, all of them.”

Such sentiments, he warns, are holding Scotland back. The Scotsman wholeheart­edly agrees.

The SNP government sought to tackle sectariani­sm with the Offensive Behaviour at Football Act, which was overturned by MSPS who felt the law was flawed. It may well have been poor legislatio­n but, in failing to come up with any kind of replacemen­t, our elected representa­tives have sent the wrong message to the terraces – that vile sectarian songs are fine.

First Minister Nicola Sturgeon yesterday condemned the abuse and attacks on Hibs manager Neil Lennon, praised the “great dignity” he had shown and pledged to take action to ensure “zero tolerance” of bigotry of any kind. She should now take steps to build the kind of campaign that flickered brightly under Mcconnell but faded over the years.

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