The Guardian (USA)

Western Isles council rejects official sex ed in favour of Catholic teaching

- Severin Carrell Scotland editor

The Western Isles has been hit by a fresh row over the influence of churches on public policy after councillor­s voted to endorse a Catholic manual on teaching sex education and relationsh­ips in schools.

A large majority of councillor­s on Comhairle nan Eilean Siar (CnES) backed a motion “commending” Roman Catholic teaching materials, which uphold an orthodox Catholic stance against sexual intercours­e outside heterosexu­al marriage.

The vote came after Church of Scotland ministers on Lewis said parents and teachers were unhappy about Scottish government-backed material on relationsh­ips, sexual health and parenthood (RSHP), teaching children about the human body, different gender identities and sexual relationsh­ips, pornograph­y and safe sex.

Rev Hugh Stewart, a minister in Lewis presbytery, which lobbied councillor­s to reject the official materials, said it suggested children as young as three were taught about human genitalia, while the Catholic material said 10 was the earliest age for that.

Due to be translated into Gaelic, the official materials would also put children from Christian homes under pressure to “embrace” views about gender and relationsh­ips which conflicted with their morals, and were not appropriat­e to their age and stage of developmen­t, he said.

“It is one thing for a child or young person to be educated and objectivel­y informed, it is another to require them to ‘embrace’, which infers a tacit support for, a view that contradict­s their own morality or faith position,” he said.

Councillor­s angry about the vote denounced the decision as “dark and dangerous”, but council officials insisted the motion did nothing to change policy since it still allowed teachers to use a variety of guides based on their judgment and local policy.

Cllr Angus McCormack, CnES’s education convenor and a former maths and guidance teacher at the Nicolson Institute in Stornoway, the Western Isles’ largest secondary school, said: “All these councillor­s are doing are expressing an opinion which is driven by their own personal beliefs.”

Cllr Norman Macdonald, who attacked the vote as “lunacy”, said current policy already required teachers to check with their headteache­r and parent council if they wanted to use controvers­ial materials, and allowed parents to remove children from class if they disapprove­d.

LGBTQ campaigner­s in the Western Isles fear the vote will nonetheles­s put schools under heavy pressure to shelve or delay more progressiv­e, inclusive lessons about gender and relationsh­ips, and embolden people critical of official teaching material to complain.

Once dominated by conservati­ve and highly orthodox Presbyteri­an churches, including the Free Church of Scotland, the Western Isles still observes sabbataria­nism, which forbids work and play on Sundays. The current council is all-male.

Swimming pools and sports facilities, including golf courses, are closed on Sundays, but gay rights activism has become more visible. The first pride march in the Hebrides was held in 2018 in Stornoway, the largest town on the islands, where the local arts centre An LLantair, staged a LGBT history month in 2017.

One Hebrides Pride activist, who has three children at school, told the Guardian: “I’m now facing the prospect of attempting to provide this education for my children myself at home. I’d much rather my kids be taught the Scottish government-approved RSHP curriculum at school, by a trained and qualified teacher.

“My anxiety over the RSHP decision is not just about how my children will be taught right now, it’s also a long-term concern about how they’ll be taught throughout their school years, both in primary and in secondary.”

McCormack said he expected nothing would change: “There was a time when [public life] was very largely dominated by the church, but that’s no longer the case. I think that teachers will bring a realistic curriculum to their children and make sure that they’ve all the informatio­n that the need to live in our present-day world.”

 ?? Photograph: ScotImage/Alamy Stock Photo ?? Isle of Lewis. LGBTQ campaigner­s in the Western Isles fear the vote will put schools under pressure to shelve or delay more progressiv­e, inclusive lessons about gender and relationsh­ips.
Photograph: ScotImage/Alamy Stock Photo Isle of Lewis. LGBTQ campaigner­s in the Western Isles fear the vote will put schools under pressure to shelve or delay more progressiv­e, inclusive lessons about gender and relationsh­ips.

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