Monday, May 12, 2008

Will Québec Decide to ‘Reasonably Accommodate’ Islam?

MIDDLE EAST FORUM: As religious prescriptions for living lately have come to be infused into daily life in novel and provocative ways, the question is often posed: Has the presence of Islam changed the face of social relations in the West? The question has especially animated Canada's bilingual Quebec province - a political entity that seeks to apply the rule of law to all its residents, without exception. This is a debate we'd do well to consider, as voices raised to implement and to protest exceptions to the law become more frequent, more strident, and more divisive.

In the beginning was the town of Hérouxville (motto: Carpe Diem), whose municipal council unanimously adopted a code (in English and in French) of "societal norms" in January. These applied to the town's 1,300 residents, but concerned future resident immigrants, especially. Most noted was language condemning public stoning of women and genital excision.

The point? The fact that "men and women have the same value." And that from this derives

"a woman's right to drive an automobile, vote her conscience, sign checks, dance, and decide for herself."

The town's normative code also remarks that Quebeckers are wont to decorate Christmas trees and patronize physicians of either gender, that cuts of pork and beef may very well mingle on the butcher's table, and that girls and boys do swim together.

This being, the charter continues,

"we consider it unacceptable to stone women to death in the public square, or to burn them alive, disfigure them with acid, or subject them to genital mutilation."

It also requires residents to expose their faces, at all times, in public, for purposes of identification (All Hallow's Eve excepted). Will Quebec Decide to 'Reasonably Accommodate' Islam? >>> By R John Matthies, American Thinker | September 16, 2007

The Dawning of a New Dark Age (Paperback – Canada)
The Dawning of a New Dark Age (Hardback – Canada)