Hnn | The Latest From HNN | Details

French Secularism Put to the Test

 

French Secularism Put to the Test

GUEST COLUMN By TERRY SANDERSON

For HumanistNetworkNews.org
July 1, 2009


First published in Newsline June 26, 2009


We often point to France as a beacon of secularism, a country with a constitution that guarantees religious rights but ensures that they are completely separate from the functions of the state.

Now religion and secularism in France are in conflict in two arenas. First, whether a parliamentary commission should be established to consider banning the burqa from French soil and second, whether Scientology should be outlawed in France.

President Sarkozy said in a speech to both houses of the French Parliament last week that he favored a ban on face coverings for Muslim women.

He said "The burqa is not a religious problem, it's a question of liberty and women's dignity. It's not a religious symbol, but a sign of subservience and debasement. I want to say solemnly, the burqa is not welcome in France. In our country, we can't accept women prisoners behind a screen, cut off from all social life, deprived of all identity. That is not our idea of freedom."

In the same speech he said that Islam deserved respect like all other religions in the secular republic. He said any restrictions on wearing the burqa would not be anti-Islam but pro-women's freedom.

Some commentators suspect that Sarkozy is generating this controversy to deflect attention from his plans to change the constitution in a way that would give him more presidential power. Already he has manipulated the right for the president to talk directly to legislators - something that had previously been proscribed in order to protect the independence of lawmakers.

We should always look at ulterior motives before we make any judgments about what Sarkozy is saying.

In the meantime, a Paris court case that drew to a close this week was considering the claims of two former members of the Scientology cult that the "church" has defrauded them of large amounts of money and damaged them psychologically.

The case rapidly turned into the question of whether Scientology should be banished entirely from France. Two of the prosecutors called for dissolution of the church itself.

The Church of Scientology and its legal team argued vociferously that French authorities are using Scientology as a "scapegoat," as one defense lawyer said, as an overall campaign in France against freedom of religion and a crackdown on sects. We will have to wait until the judgment is issued on Oct. 27 before we know whether the calls for a ban will be heeded.

Roger Gonnet, a former Scientology official who testified against the "church",  told the Monitor news site that "French courts don't rule about religion in law, but no association (church) should be allowed to get away with illicit activity and fraud, or cover it up with private settlements."

" his is a church built on lies, and France is taking it seriously," he adds. "France doesn't take 11 days in court with two prosecutors on such a case if it isn't significant."

Eric Roux, acting president of a Paris Scientology branch, wrote in an e-mail that the trial prosecutors, "who receive orders directly from the Justice ministry ... showed nothing new in any charge. Instead, the religion of Scientology was attacked in a very general way, like an Inquisition for 45,000 of us. Still, we believe that after 50 years of Scientology in France, the French Constitution will protect us."

But French analysts are divided over the scope of the precedent a ban of the church would set. Those who say it won't matter much point to a narrow prosecutorial focus on the behavior of two Paris Scientology centers, and say change of the 1905 laws on religion is a non-starter.

 But human rights lawyers like Valerie Billamboz in Strasbourg say a recent push by an intergovernmental French body to list 173 unorthodox sects in France means that a ban "would set a real precedent for those groups, and allow a larger witch-hunt."

Indeed, some legal experts note that state prosecutors, by escalating far past a mere settling of grievances for two plaintiffs, and pushing for an outright ban of the church, appear to be attacking religious freedom in exactly the manner Scientologists claim.

Critics of the church, however, argue that Scientology uses the demarcation of "church" - with the rights implied - to claim privileges and hide unsavory behaviour.

Six U.S. lawmakers on the House Judiciary Committee in the United States last month sent a letter to Pierre Vimont, the French ambassador to Washington, expressing concern about a new "black list" of 173 sects in France, stemming from what is known as the MIVILUDES report, emerging out of the prime minister's office.

"Not only would ... a new 'black list' represent a major step backward for religious freedom in France, it would contravene fundamental human rights," the letter stated.

French media opinion during the trial, which began May 28, has been generally unsympathetic to Scientology. Christophe Barbier, deputy editor of l'Express, backed the "eradication of Scientology from French soil," saying it would be a "symbol for the world ... by protecting the public from crooks and charlatans."

Patrick Maisonneuve, lead attorney for the church, however, said a church ban would symbolize a narrow and intolerant side of France. Scientology is recognized in Portugal, Sweden, Spain, and elsewhere, he said.

Terry Sanderson is the president of the National Secular Society (U.K.). He is also the editor of the weekly NSS Newsline, in which this article first appeared on June 26, 2009. This article is republished by permission of the NSS.

Posted 08:41AM on July 01 2009 by Ruth N. Geller
Categories: Ezine

American Humanist Association

Supporters of Humanist Charities are urged to send direct support to the America...

1 hours ago

American Humanist Association

The AHA has offered long-standing support for making death a dignified part of l...

2 hours ago

American Humanist Association

The U.S. Department of State just released its 2012 Annual Report on Internation...

23 hours ago

American Humanist Association

The author of this Psychology Today article, Leon F. Seltzer, will be speaking a...

24 hours ago

American Humanist Association

Here's a really nice article from the Religion News Service about humanist weddi...

1 days ago

American Humanist Association

Here is a list of "categories" to try and avoid when posting on our page. • [Th...

1 days ago

American Humanist Association

In his Psychology Today blog, former AHA president David Niose coins the term "c...

2 days ago

American Humanist Association

Roy Speckhardt, AHA Executive Director, and Matthew Bulger, AHA Legislative Asso...

4 days ago

American Humanist Association

This Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life report shows that the number of "nones"...

4 days ago

American Humanist Association

In this Washington Post On Faith article, AHA board member and Humanist Press au...

4 days ago

American Humanist Association

Here is this week's Fun Friday Comic!

4 days ago

American Humanist Association

Have you ever tried a humanist crossword puzzle?

5 days ago

American Humanist Association

The AHA's Appignani Humanist Legal Center is demanding that a Fayette High Schoo...

5 days ago

American Humanist Association

Performers from the Evolution Of Comedy tour will be part of the AHA's 72nd Annu...

5 days ago

American Humanist Association

The Mississippi student being represented by the AHA's Appignani Humanist Legal...

6 days ago

American Humanist Association

Among the many fun events taking place at the AHA's upcoming conference May 30-J...

6 days ago

American Humanist Association

We are co-sponsoring this Center for Inquiry online month-long course beginning...

6 days ago

American Humanist Association

The North Miami mayoral candidate who claimed an endorsement from Jesus got 0.83...

6 days ago

American Humanist Association

We learned of this a little late, but the governor of Rhode Island signed a Nati...

7 days ago

American Humanist Association

Ayanna Watson, founder of Black Atheists of America, will be speaking at the upc...

7 days ago

American Humanist Association

Angelina Jolie, a humanist, released a statement in the The New York Times today...

7 days ago

American Humanist Association

MN Gov. Mark Dayton has scheduled a bill-signing ceremony at 5 p.m. today. (T...

7 days ago

American Humanist Association

A billboard from the Midwest from a 2012 blog entry (http://bit.ly/100TwCj). Wh...

8 days ago

American Humanist Association

Tom Krattenmaker, a speaker at the AHA's upcoming annual conference, has an arti...

8 days ago

American Humanist Association

A little Monday morning trivia... Did you know there is a font group known as H...

8 days ago

American Humanist Association

In addition to honoring our mothers today, a short poem by 1997 Humanist of the...

9 days ago

American Humanist Association

A quote from AHA President Rebecca Hale pulled from the Colorado Springs Gazette...

11 days ago

American Humanist Association

Here is this week's Fun Friday Comic!

11 days ago

American Humanist Association

AHA President Rebecca Hale and her husband Gary Betchan, the co-founders of Evol...

11 days ago