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British
Government: Christians Have No Right to Wear Visible Cross or Crucifix
by Patrick
Goodenough
March 14, 2012
Britain’s
Conservative-led government plans to argue in a European Court of Human
Rights
case that employers are entitled to ban the visible wearing of crosses
at work
because displaying the symbol is not a recognized “requirement” of the
Christian faith.
A document
leaked to Britain’s Sunday Telegraph outlines the argument the
government plans
to present at the tribunal in Strasbourg, France, where two Christian
women
will claim that their rights were violated when employers barred them
from
wearing crosses at work.
At the
center of the applicants’ case is Article 9 of the European Convention
on Human
Rights, which states, “Everyone has the right to freedom of thought,
conscience
and religion; this right includes freedom to change his religion or
belief, and
freedom, either alone or in community with others and in public or
private, to
manifest his religion or belief, in worship, teaching, practice and
observance.”
But the
government will argue that “the applicants’ wearing of a visible cross
or
crucifix was not a manifestation of their religion or belief within the
meaning
of Article 9.”
Furthermore,
it will say that “the restriction on the applicants’ wearing of a
visible cross
or crucifix was not an ‘interference’ with their rights protected by
Article
9.”
“In neither
case is there any suggestion that the wearing of a visible cross or
crucifix
was a generally recognized form of practicing the Christian faith,
still less
one that is regarded (including by the applicants themselves) as a
requirement
of the faith,” says the document, which the Telegraph says was prepared
by the
Foreign Office.
The second
most-senior figure in the Anglican Church, Archbishop of York John
Sentamu,
told the BBC Sunday that the government was “beginning to meddle in
areas that
they ought not to. I think they should leave that to the courts to make
a
judgment.”
Earlier
another Anglican bishop challenged the argument about displaying a
cross not
being a requirement of Christianity.
“OK, if you
say wearing a cross isn’t a compulsory part of Christianity, we agree,”
Bishop
of Peterborough Donald Allister told the Telegraph last month. “But it
is a
duty of a Christian to be public about their faith as well as private,
and that
is clear New Testament teaching.”
News of the
government’s intervention in the case comes amid a raging dispute
between the
government and church leaders over Conservative Prime Minister David
Cameron’s
plans to legalize same-sex marriage by 2015.
Hijabs,
turbans allowed
The
European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) is the final destination of two
drawn-out
legal battles, brought by Nadia Eweida and Shirley Chaplin, two women
who fell
foul of their employers for wearing crosses at work.
Eweida, a
Coptic Christian and British Airways staffer at Heathrow Airport, was
told in
2006 to remove or cover up a small cross she wears around her neck. She
refused
and was sent home on unpaid leave. Eweida noted that colleagues of
other
religions, including Muslims and Sikhs, were allowed to wear religious
items
such as hijabs, turbans and religious bracelets.
The airline
policy won the backing of the National Secular Society, which
complained that
activists were “determined to push religion to the front line of
British life”
and accused Eweida of clearly being “motivated by a wish to evangelize
at
work.”
The
following year British Airways changed its uniform policy and allowed
Eweida to
return to work, but refused to pay her for the period she was
suspended.
Claiming religious discrimination, she took the case to an employment
tribunal,
but lost.
After the
Supreme Court declined to consider her case, she decided to take the
matter to
the ECHR.
Chaplin, a
nurse in her 50s, was prohibited from working at a hospital after
refusing to
cover up a cross she said she had worn at work throughout a 30-year
nursing
career. An employment tribunal in 2010 ruled in favor of the employer,
a
government National Health Service (NHS) trust, saying its policy was
based on
health and safety grounds, not religion, and adding that wearing a
cross was
not a requirement for Christians.
Six senior
Anglican bishops, including former Archbishop of Canterbury George
Carey,
backed Chaplin, saying in a March 2010 letter that that nurse “has worn
the
cross every day since her confirmation [40 years earlier] as a sign of
her
Christian faith, a faith which led to her vocation in nursing, and
which has
sustained her in that vital work ever since.”
“The
uniform policy of the NHS trust permits exemptions for religious
clothing,”
they wrote. “This has been exercised with regard to other faiths, but
not with
regard to the wearing of a cross around the neck.”
The ECHR
has also been asked to consider two other cases brought by British
Christians
claiming religious discrimination – a woman who lost her job with a
London
council in 2007 after she refused to conduct civil partnership
ceremonies for
same-sex couples; and a relationship counselor who was fired by a large
national charity after refusing to provide sex therapy to same-sex
couples.
Britain has
given same-sex couples similar legal rights to married couples under
civil
partnership provisions introduced in 2005.
Now
Cameron’s government is proposing to legalize marriage for same-sex
couples in
England and Wales, launching a public consultation exercise on the
matter.
Although
churches will not be forced to perform “weddings” for homosexual and
lesbian
couples, the proposals have ignited a storm of protest.
A letter by
senior Roman Catholic archbishops, read at thousands of churches across
England
and Wales on Sunday, warned that that changing the legal definition of
marriage
would be a “profoundly radical step” that would “gradually and
inevitably
transform society’s understanding of the purpose of marriage.”
Source:
CNSNews.com
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