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| Living in a multi-faith society |
| Written by Debbie Enever | |
| Wednesday, 26 March 2008 | |
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On the 7th March 2008, LDCF held a conference fringe entitled ‘Living in a multi-faith society’ to continue the discussions started at the Party’s manifesto conference. Simon Hughes MP, Paul Holmes MP, Martin Turner and Mohammed Shafiq all contributed from the panel. Martin Turner surmised that political correctness has gone mad in the news recently with a couple being disallowed from fostering because they are too ‘Christian’ and a woman in the Netherlands being forbidden to wear a Bhurkini swimming outfit because it was deemed too modest. Political correctness often ascribes views to people who do not hold them. For example, The Conservatives have no policy on multi-culturalism – preferring to harp back to a ‘Golden British Age’ that never really existed. They only pay lipservice to these issues. Labour often don’t say anything because they are concerned someone will disagree. The Liberal position chimes with that of the Christian. Our democracy is founded on robust debate – anyone can say anything and anyone is free to disagree. We should rejoice that the blasphemy rules have been abolished. Our Faith can make its own case in the Marketplace – it needs no special protection.
Paul Holmes explained that he was originally attracted to the SDP (there were no Liberals then in Mohammed Shafiq reminded us that faith plays an important part in everyone’s life. He explained that his definition of multiculturalism is that we have different faiths but share common goals and values. When silly decisions are made, like to ‘cancel’ Christmas, it has a bad effect on the whole community -we need respect and tolerance for everyone. There should be equity – if we have Church schools, we should also be able to have Muslim schools – the best way to combat extremism is to bring in Ofsted inspections and the National Curriculum. The government tends to (wrongly) assume that ‘Muslims’ or ‘Sikhs’ want x. The media too gives a wrong impression – Muslims are only 1.6m out of 60m people in the Simon Hughes said he thought that we were having a useful series of discussions about issues which are very real at the moment. The blasphemy law was outdated and indefensible, we should respect the faith of others, but expect them to be challenged. Simon is part of the all-party group for conflict issues which seeks to address how we deal with conflict in the world. Why do we have a Ministry of War? Surely we want one of Peace! Since the The present position on faith schools is not defensible. We need to grasp the nettle on Faith schools – the party needs to develop a consensus. Admissions should be open – otherwise it can also lead to racial segregation. There is the possibility of having a new autumn bank holiday - we need a debate about whether this should be a non-Christian holiday. Likewise, if we have special arrangements for parking on a Sunday which aids Church goers – we should have similar provisions outside other faith buildings on their Holy day. Following points from the floor …
Paul added that there are so many differences within communities, how do you ‘consult faith communities’ as the Government wants? People look for someone to blame and having mixed communities and schools would help to defer this. The circles we move in are not necessarily typical of the whole country. Mohammed pointed out the problem was often misconceptions. In Martin said that the problem was often one of false representation – bureaucrats deciding and attributing it to someone/ somegroup else. Similarly, the Daily Mail and Telegraph often claim to speak for Christians, but aren’t. We should not equate faith with tradition. People who support faith schools often don’t have a faith themselves – that’s why they have to lie to get in! Any they probably vote Conservative… Religion is often used to support tribalism, and to say things which could otherwise not be said! We have too many laws impinging on faith too much. There must be space for conscience in law, but we should protect the rights of the individual, not the faith. Whether we abandon faith schools or not, he’s not bothered - it’s not important enough. Simon added that we live in a
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