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The Canadian Paradox:
Where Freedom of Religion Walks Hand-in-Hand With Discomfort Over Minority Faiths

NICHOLAS KEUNG

 

 

 



It’s a Canadian paradox: We identify human rights and freedoms as among our most important values. Yet many struggle to accept something as simple as a headscarf.




To strangers, she’s often defined by her hijab. But to her friends, Aisha Khaja is simply an inspiring, giving young woman who happens to be Muslim.

The Toronto woman is also one of 2.4 million Canadians, or about 7.2 per cent, who belong to a faith other than Christianity. And like Khaja, adherents of Islam, Sikhism, Hinduism, Buddhism and other religions say they often still feel the sting of being considered “the other” in a country where two-thirds of the population claim some degree of affiliation with Christianity.

According to a new report by the Canadian Race Relations Foundation, a poll of 2,005 Canadian adults put respect for human rights and freedoms at the top of a list of “Canadian values.”

Yet, 64 per cent said they feel Canada’s multicultural ideals “allow for the pursuit of cultural practices that are incompatible with Canadian laws and norms.”

Some 28 per cent named wearing of religious garb, such as hijabs, turbans or burkas, as an example of such practices. Some 46 per cent said wearing such items should be discouraged.

“As Canadians, we pride ourselves for our tolerance of differences, but how can you be tolerant if someone has to be this and that?” wondered Khaja’s best friend, Sabrina Sahadevan, a non-denominational Christian.

“It’s strange and ironic to me that we embrace religious tolerance only if it fits our mode,” added the 24-year-old medical student. “We can’t be closed-minded on both ends. The bottom line is, whatever you do does not hurt or harm anybody.”

Canada adopted an official policy of multiculturalism in 1971 in a bid to ensure equality for all citizens and recognition of aboriginal rights, alongside commitment to the two official languages. It also asserts the freedom of Canadians to practise their faith and preserve their heritage and cultural identity without fear of persecution.

As Canada’s demographics have evolved with changing immigration patterns, the focus of multiculturalism has shifted. In the 1960s and ’70s, it was about recognizing the contributions of ethnic communities; in the 1980s and ’90s, the push to eliminate racism and enhance social equity.

Today, the debate is dominated by questions about religious accommodation.

With growing immigration from Asia and the Middle East, the percentage of Canadians following a non-Christian faith has risen in the past decade from 4.9 per cent to 7.2 per cent, led by Muslims (3.2 per cent), Hindu (1.5), Sikh (1.4), Buddhist (1.1) and Jewish (1).

Ottawa’s creation of the Office of Religious Freedom in 2013 and recent introduction of the Zero Tolerance for Barbaric Cultural Practices Act are prime examples of the shift in focus.

Queen’s University professor Will Kymlicka said there is certainly a bias against non-Christian religions. While some Canadians negatively view hijabs and burkas as a symbol of gender oppression, he said, the Catholic Church’s refusal to allow female priests isn’t given the same weight.

“It is clearly a double standard,” said Kymlicka, who specializes in social justice within multicultural society. “That’s the challenge we face.”

What Kymlicka found interesting of the race relations foundation survey on Canadian values was that respondents were more likely to raise objections to religious clothing (28 per cent) than to bring up Sharia law (5) or the practice, in some Muslim countries, of condoning “honour killing” (4).

His guess is that, unlike the more distant issues of Sharia law or honour killing, religious garb is something people in Canada are “visually confronted with, in your face every day, and that’s when things hit home.”

Khaja, 25, was born in Saudi Arabia and moved to Toronto with her family in 1999. She started wearing a hijab in Grade 6 at Brockmill Junior Public School, where she was the only girl in a headscarf in her class.

Through the years, she has suffered her share of inquisitive stares from strangers, and at times experienced unprovoked verbal attacks (“go back home to your country”) from random people on the street.

Khaja, who holds a Master’s degree in Education and now works as an advisor for the provincial government, believes intolerance of religious clothing stems from preconceived notions about women who use the veil, something even her best non-Muslim friends weren’t immune to.

She and her Christian friend, Sahadevan, once had a huge argument over her head covering that almost wrecked their friendship.

“I read that women had no choice but were forced to wear the hijab. To me, it was a form of oppression, and I did not want that for Aisha. I asked if her dad made her do it. I told her if she did not want to wear it, she shouldn’t wear it,” said Sahadevan, 24, who has known Khaja since Grade 6.

“We had too many religious differences, and I said to her, ‘We can’t be friends anymore,’” she recalled with a chuckle. “We stopped talking for two days.”

Khaja said it is bizarre that people would have more issues with women who try to “dress modestly” by covering up than those who flaunt their bodies. Yet, she said she is grateful to live in a multicultural Canada, which challenges her faith daily and makes her a stronger person.

“If I’d continued to live in Saudi Arabia, nobody would ask any question about religion,” said Khaja, who co-hosts the Vision TV program, Let the Quran Speak. “Here I have to struggle to maintain my religion, my identity. It is a blessing to live here, though it comes with challenge.”

Born and raised in Queensville, north of Newmarket, Ontario, Balpreet Singh said his father stopped wearing a turban and cut his hair after he came to Canada in 1970. In his first day of kindergarten, he remembered a little boy coming over to him and telling him he wouldn’t be his friend.

“I knew well then that there’s something about me that I can’t hide, which is the colour of my skin,” said Balpreet, 33, who graduated from the University of Ottawa law school and now practises human rights law.

When he started Grade 1 at Queensville Public School, he asked his parents to let him grow his hair. He started wearing a small turban in Grade 4 and was initiated into the Khalsa discipline at 15, at a gurdwara in Scarborough.

“I saw my identity as an asset to me. I may look different, but it makes me a better person. I have to set higher standards and do better because people look at me,” says the father of two girls.

Balpreet too had his share of unpleasant experiences related to wearing a turban and carrying a kirpan, the Sikh ceremonial dagger. He says he was asked by a teacher to remove his “hat” while singing “O Canada,” mocked by bullies on the school bus using racial epithets, refused entry to a Toronto courthouse for his law class, and removed from a VIA train because he was carrying a “weapon.”

“This is my country and I belong here, but I am not given the same rights,” said Balpreet. “Appearance does matter. I chose to wear my articles of faith and I was given different sets of challenges.”

The Canadian Race Relations Foundation’s Rubin Friedman said the offence taken over religious clothing also reflects Canadians’ discomfort with women covering their faces and the perceived values associated with veiling.

A key element of Canada’s Multiculturalism Act, officially passed in 1988, is to promote mutual respect, inclusion and full participation in the country’s diverse fabric.

“People are expected to participate together and not to be separated from one another,” said Friedman, who is of Jewish background and has been involved in integration and anti-racism work for over 25 years.

Public displays of one’s faith can be “a symbol of you separating yourself from others, rejecting the rest of us. That is a concern.”

Amanpreet Kaur, a Sikh, believes what underlies some of the discomfort with religious clothing is racism, exacerbated when it comes to racial minorities who overtly express devotion to their faith.

Amanpreet, who met Khaja while studying at the University of Toronto, said there is a hierarchy of discrimination. Racism is no longer publicly acceptable and is expressed more subtly today; it’s easier to point to racial minorities who wear their faith visibly as being incompatible with Canadian values.

“I think that the fear is always there; underlying it is the fear of somebody who is different than us,” said Amanpreet, 26. “So it’s okay to practise your faith in the confines of your home, but you can’t wear any religious symbols in public. And it’s OK for Christians to wear a crucifix, for Jews to wear a yarmulke. To me, equality means equality to everyone. You can’t be selective.”

Balpreet agrees.

“The Charter of Rights is an amazing document that enshrines the values of what it means to be Canadian,” he said. “If we interact and behave according to those values, it will serve as a strong base for our community.”

While white -- and Christian -- privilege is part of Canada’s colonial and imperial legacy, Richard Chambers, of the Toronto Area Interfaith Council, said Canada has seen a pendulum swing between ‘open’ and ‘closed’ secularism in the last century.

Chambers highlighted the contrasting approaches to secularism among English-speaking and French-speaking respondents.

Last year, Quebec’s proposed ‘charter of values‘, which would have banned public employees from wearing religious symbols such as hijabs, turbans and yarmulkes, offered a prime example of that difference. Opposition to the proposal was far stronger outside Quebec.

A separate report by the foundation earlier this year found that, while 40 per cent of Canadians voiced “some anxiety” about religious diversity, the rate shot up to 54 per cent among Francophones, who believed having many religious groups in Canada “is more of a liability than an asset.”

“People in Quebec may be more liberal in their social policies, but they are more predisposed to ‘closed’ secularism,” discouraging any public display of religious faith, Chambers said, in reference to the province’s unique struggle within Confederation.

There’s a big difference between embracing equality and equity, said Chambers.

“It is like having a party. You don’t just invite everybody to the party. You have to make an extra effort to make sure everybody is accommodated,” he explained.

Out of the tragedy of 9/11, Chambers said, has come the blessing of a robust interfaith dialogue among Canadians, through initiatives such as twinning mosques and synagogues to foster goodwill and solidarity.

Despite seemingly polarizing views on religious accommodation, Queen’s University’s Kymlicka remains optimistic, as long as all groups continue to be engaged and are treated equitably.

“We have a multi-faith, multicultural and multiracial society. We can’t turn Canada back to a white British society,” he said.


[Courtesy: The Toronto Star. Edited for sikhchic.com]
January 4, 2015
 

Conversation about this article

1: Hayley Prentice (Hoboken, New Jersey, USA), January 04, 2015, 10:16 AM.

"Zero Tolerance for Barbaric Cultural Practices Act"? Would that cover the barbaric practice of genital mutilation of little babies? I'm talking of circumcision of male AND female children -- not just the practice of the Somalis. And would the Act cover the public display of a torture instrument, complete with a bloodied human body, in full view of little children, in schools? I'm talking about the crucifix, of course. I suspect that if they are the practices of Christians or Jews, they'll be easily overlooked or explained away, but those of the 'others' will give rise to righteous outrage and energetic activism. Lord, our hypocrisy is so transparent, it's not even funny!

2: Dinesh Khukhran (New Delhi, India), January 04, 2015, 10:52 AM.

I wonder if Catholic nuns in Canada will now be freed from the oppressive requirement of some Christian Orders to shave their heads or wear their hair close-cropped under head-to-toe burqa-like habits? And the Orthodox Jews be required to free their women from their oppressive religious laws and courts (not unlike the Muslim Sharia kind) and, at the very least, stop spitting on them when in disagreement with their life-styles? Or are the hijab and turban the biggest culprits on the Canadian horizon? Hey guys, stop behaving like you're living in India! It's bad enough that we have to cope with the likes of your ridiculous Act. But you? In Canada?

3: Harsimrat Kaur (Lethbridge, Alberta, Canada), January 04, 2015, 11:41 AM.

It is true that we in Canada do struggle with multi-cultural, multi-ethnic and multi-faith issues. But that is exactly what makes Canada the greatest place on earth. We struggle, yes, and we have disagreement, and sometimes even conflict and dissent, but it always remains within civilized bounds. And the net result is that we keep on moving forward, we keep on making real progress. To the point today that I can honestly say that we have a land and people which constitute the closest it gets to heaven on earth. It is not a perfect society, but with warts and all, it is a decent and humane society where all its citizens live free of fear and enjoy equal opportunity. Not perfectly or ideally, I hasten to add, but slowly and steadily, we keep on moving forward. Which makes us unique in the world.

4: Oliver Smith (United Kingdom), January 04, 2015, 7:15 PM.

I always find nativist "go back where you came from!" attitudes vaguely amusing when they're being expressed by people from societies built on colonialism. The irony is amazing. The modern American and Canadian societies have been constructed entirely by wave after wave of migration. The idea that the turban or the hijab are somehow more foreign than the polo shirt or the baseball cap is absurd. Not that the old-world 'cultural nationalism' is any better. If anything, prejudice has become much more deeply-entrenched on this side of the Atlantic. From France and Holland to Japan and India the far-right is on the march once more.

5: Aryeh Leib Lerner (Israel), January 05, 2015, 10:30 AM.

To my mind this is not so much a paradox as it is work in progress on an individual level, extrapolated to a societal level. We're all on a path of development. Most of us are unaware of this. Canadian society seems to be running ahead of the curve, and serves as good example of what's possible. But let's take a hypothetical case closer to home. A Protestant comes into a gurdwara bareheaded. The sevadar hands him an orange scarf, to which he responds, "Wait a minute! A group of Sikhs visited our church last Sunday. We allowed them to keep their turbans on, even though it's our custom that a covered head in a house of God is a mark of disrespect. Isn't accommodation a two way street?" How would this scenario be played?

6: Inder Kaur (Chandigarh, Punjab), January 05, 2015, 12:50 PM.

This should be an easy one to solve for anyone willing to think it out, Aryeh Leib Lerner ji. As you have so correctly pointed out, uncovering a head in a church is a CUSTOM, and not a requirement of their faith. The proof is that the 'custom' varies from church to church, person to person, community to community. And the same person has no qualms over covering his head elsewhere, such as with a baseball cap, to take but one example. On the other hand, covering the head in a gurdwara is a requirement of all Sikhs. However, if there is a strong reason for any visiting individual -- such as his/her religion prohibiting the covering of the head -- then an exception could be made for that individual even in a gurdwara, without any difficulty. Thanks for this example: it highlights the difference between the two situations, and also shows how easy it is to resolve the issue if one gives it a bit of thought and keeps an open mind.

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