Survey shows Muslim population is fastest growing religion in Canada

Postmedia News | 13/05/08

OTTAWA — The Islamic centre in Saskatoon is experiencing growing pains. Friday services have been split in two so local streets aren’t clogged with traffic. City officials and nearby residents are working with the centre to answer questions like where to put more parking?

“We have been experiencing this kind of steady increase for a while,” said Amin Elshorbagy, president of the Canadian Islamic Congress.

“We can see this in terms of the need to expand our infrastructure. Most of our Islamic centres are becoming very crowded.” Continue reading

Are we living in post-religious times? … “spiritual but not religious”

By Janet Davison, CBC NewsPosted: Mar 20, 2013 

While Canadians' church-going habits may have changed dramatically, some people who look closely at such things don't see faith, or a belief in God or a universal spirit, disappearing completely.While Canadians’ church-going habits may have changed dramatically, some people who look closely at such things don’t see faith, or a belief in God or a universal spirit, disappearing completely. (Canadian Press)

Despite all the attention on the Catholic church and the papacy since Pope Benedict’s surprise resignation in February, many pews have been sitting empty across Canada for years. Continue reading

Being Consistent with “throughout your generations or forever”

Question – Why are you inconsistent in following the directions that are “throughout your generations or forever”?    You quote the Sabbath one as something you must keep and yet you mention the circumcision one as something that is done away with.
Answer - Exodus 31:13 “Speak also to the children of Israel, saying: ‘Surely My Sabbaths you shall keep, for it is a sign between Me and you throughout your generations, that you may know that I am the Lord who sanctifies you.”
The Sabbath is a sign that was created during Creation for man.   The Sabbath was not part of “a covenant” or temple practice, although there was temple practices around the Sabbath it was not contingent on them, or on the Covenant to Abraham or Israel.  As such it is always in force. Continue reading

Canada names head of religious freedom office

Feb 19, 2013, TORONTO (RNS) After nearly two years of delay, Canada on Tuesday (Feb. 19) finally named its ambassador for the Office of Religious Freedom.

At a mosque north of Toronto, Prime Minister Stephen Harper named Andrew Bennett to head the office.

“Around the world, violations of religious freedom are widespread and they are increasing,” Harper said in a speech at the Ahmadiyya Muslim community center and mosque in Vaughan, Ontario.

“Dr. Bennett is a man of principle and deep convictions and he will encourage the protection of religious minorities around the world so all can practice their faith without fear of violence and repression.”

Bennett, a Catholic, is dean of Augustine College, a Christian liberal arts college in Ottawa.

Harper first promised to create an Office of Religious Freedom during his 2011 campaign. It will be part of the Foreign Affairs ministry and have an annual budget of $5 million.

“This was a platform commitment, to create an office of religious freedom, to make the protection of religious freedom of vulnerable religious minorities a key pillar of Canadian foreign policy,” Immigration Minister Jason Kenney, who attended the announcement, told reporters.

Creating and staffing the office has not been without controversy. Bennett was reportedly the third, possibly fourth, person to be offered the post.

And in 2011, a closed-door meeting organized by the government was criticized by some scholars because four of the six consultants were Christian, while the other two were Jewish and Baha’i.

Critics have said the office is a misguided attempt to inject religion into foreign policy, and some have expressed concern that it would be biased toward the persecution of Christians.

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Scholar Andrew Bennett to lead Canada’s Office of Religious Freedom

CTV, Feb. 19, 2013

The federal government has appointed a Christian college dean to head up Canada’s new, controversial Office of Religious Freedom.
Andrew Bennett, the Catholic dean of Augustine College, a Christian liberal arts school in Ottawa, has been tasked with promoting religious freedom around the world and monitoring persecution of religious minorities.
Prime Minister Stephen Harper had promised to establish the office as a branch of the Department of Foreign Affairs during the 2011 federal election campaign.

Harper announced Bennett’s appointment at the Ahmadiyya Muslim community centre and mosque in Vaughan, Ont., Tuesday afternoon, where representatives of different faiths had gathered.
The prime minister described 40-year-old Bennett, who has also worked for the Privy Council Office, as a “scholar, a man of principle and deep conviction.”
“Most of the countless men and women who are prosecuted for their faith are not known to us by name, but to them we say Canada will not forget you,” Harper said. “When you are silenced we will speak out, we will use our freedom to plead for yours.”
Bennett told reporters he’s looking forward to “taking on this great challenge.”
“It says a lot about the government wanting to promote this aspect of human rights,” he said.
“It’s (about) building awareness about the issue of religious freedom abroad; it’s about interacting with the various communities here in Canada who are in the diaspora from these areas where religious freedom is not respected.”
But human rights groups and opposition critics have said the Office of Religious Freedom is a misguided attempt to inject religion into foreign policy.
They also questioned what exactly it can accomplish with a modest $5-million budget.
“The Office of Religious Freedoms, as introduced today, represents both a broken Conservative promise and a missed opportunity,” NDP’s foreign affairs critic, Paul Dewar, said in a statement.
“Conservatives had repeatedly promised a democratic development agency, but they broke that promise and now they’re moving forward on a much more limited and narrow approach.”
Interim Liberal Leader Bob Rae agreed that religious freedom is an important value, but questioned how the newly created office will fit into Canada’s broader efforts to address human rights issues.
“I’m concerned that we shouldn’t see this as an exclusive focus,” he told CTV’s Power Play. “This has got to be part of an overall approach.”
Rae also said the values of certain religious groups may not include “a lot of other values that Canadians in fact hold dear: equality between women and men, sexual orientation as a basic principle and the right to be yourself.”
Others expressed concern that the Office of Religious Freedom may focus too much on Christians because the man leading it is a Catholic.
“I think it does raise questions about whether or not this government is biased toward Christian groups,” said Amira Elghawaby, the human-rights officer with the Canadian Council on American-Islamic Relations.
But Harper said he wants to make it “very clear that this is not an office to protect a particular religion.”
“This is an office to promote religious diversity and tolerance around the world.”
Don Hutchinson of the Evangelical Fellowship of Canada said the fact that Canada has opened its doors to immigrants from all kinds of religious backgrounds should quell any concerns about favouritism.
Immigration Minister Jason Kenney, who joined Harper for Tuesday’s announcement, along with Minister of International Co-operation Julian Fantino, told Power Play that Bennett can “develop an expertise” on religious persecutions that can better inform Canada’s foreign and immigration policies.
Asked what Bennett can do besides publicly condemn specific incidents, such as attacks on Egypt’s Coptic Christians or Tibetans in China, Kenney said: “even making statements is nothing to be sneered at.”
Kenney said the idea to create a religious freedom office was inspired by Pakistan’s minister for minorities, Shabhaz Bhatti, who was killed in 2011 shortly after meeting with Harper in Canada. Extremists had accused Bhatti, a Christian, of violating Pakistan’s blasphemy laws.
While Foreign Affairs Minister John Baird, who’s in the middle of a six-country tour of Latin America, wasn’t on hand for Tuesday’s announcement, he has been involved in many high-level meetings with religious figures over the last year and a half.
Baird has held consultations in Rome, with the head of the Greek Orthodox Church in Turkey and with the U.S. ambassador at large for international religious freedom.
The U.S. religious freedom office was put in place under the Clinton administration.

Long-awaited office of religious freedom coming soon – again

Foreign Affairs department says office to be unveiled in coming weeks
CBC News Posted: Jan 23, 2013

Foreign Affairs Minister John Baird is signalling that his long-promised, much-anticipated office of religious freedom is set to be unveiled in the coming weeks.

In a news release regarding Baird’s current trip to London for an international meeting on religious freedom, his staff noted the religious freedom office, which will be housed within the Department of Foreign Affairs, is now scheduled to open “in early 2013.” Continue reading

Top court rules judges may order witnesses to remove niqab

CBC News, Dec 20 - BUT SPLIT DECISION FAVOURS BALANCE BETWEEN RELIGIOUS RIGHTS AND FAIR TRIAL, WHEN POSSIBLE

A Muslim woman who is the complainant in a sexual assault trial in Toronto has lost her bid before Canada’s top court to have an unimpeded right to wear her niqab while testifying.

In a split Supreme Court of Canada decision released Thursday, the seven judges largely upheld a lower court’s ruling that the woman, known only as N.S. to protect her identity under a court-ordered publication ban, may have to remove her niqab.

The woman has accused her uncle and cousin of sexually assaulting her when she was between six and 10 years old, during the 1980s. Twenty-five years later, the woman told her story to police and her two male relatives were charged, but the case has not yet gone to trial.

She asked to wear a niqab, a veil worn by some Muslim women that covers virtually all of the face except the eyes, during her testimony, because of what she said were sincerely held religious beliefs.

The Supreme Court ruling is being described as a 4-2-1 decision, given the differences between the judges.

Justices Louis Lebel and Marshall Rothstein ruled that she should not wear her niqab at all during testimony.

The Supreme Court grappled with a legal dilemma in ruling whether a woman could testify in court wearing a niqab: on the one side is a religious belief said to be sincerely held, and on the other, the right of an accused to a full defence. A woman in niqab protests in Quebec over restrictions on the face covering. (Peter McCabe/Canadian Press)

Justice Rosalie Abella went the other way in dissenting, and would have allowed the niqab except in circumstances where the identity of the witness would be at stake.

David Butt, lawyer for the Muslim woman, said Thursday his client was “thrilled with the fairness and the balance that the Supreme Court has shown in addressing what has been a very difficult case for the courts to wrestle with.”

Butt, who described his client as a working mother who considers herself a survivor of childhood sexual abuse, said that she is looking forward to going back to the lower court and giving more evidence. Asked by reporters what his client would do if she were ordered to remove her niqab, Butt said that she is not, at this stage, thinking of ultimate outcomes.

Butt said that the highest court has set out guidelines, but that lawyers need examples from real cases. “This will be the first one, it will be a big one, and it will help other women going forward,” he said.

The ruling largely upholds criteria established by the Ontario Court of Appeal.

The Court of Appeal had ruled the woman may have to remove her niqab if her credibility became an issue. It also set out criteria that a judge must consider:

  • Whether the veil interfered with the cross-examination.
  • Whether the witness would be appearing before a judge only or before a jury.
  • The nature of the evidence.

The woman, known as N.S.in the court, appealed to the Supreme Court arguing her sincere religious beliefs meant that her face must be covered before all males who are not close relatives.

Lawyers for the two men accused of sexually assaulting her when she was a child argued that a fair and open trial means the face of a witness must be seen because facial cues are important to establish credibility.

The case now goes back to the preliminary inquiry stage, where it is possible the woman may be forced to testify with her face uncovered.

The majority judges allowed that “scientific exploration” in future cases about cues given by the face of a witness may enhance or diminish the arguments made in this particular case. But, they added, “It may be ventured that where the liberty of the accused is at stake, the witness’s evidence is central to the case, and her credibility vital, the possibility of a wrongful conviction must weigh heavily in the balance, favouring removal of the niqab.”

‘The niqab undermines gender equality’

Tyler Hodgson, lawyer for the Muslim Canadian Congress, an intervenor in the Supreme Court case, said that the congress is pleased with the decision. His client, he said, “would probably tell you that the niqab is not something that has its roots in the Islamic tradition, and generally speaking they find that the niqab undermines gender equality.”

Hodgson said “our reading of [the decision] is that the majority of times going forward in a criminal setting the witness will likely be asked to remove the niqab.” This would be especially true if the evidence was contested, Hodgson said, adding that in a criminal case, evidence is always contested.

Susan Chapman, lawyer for LEAF, the Women’s Legal Education and Action Fund, reads the case differently. “The starting proposition here is that she’s entitled to wear it [the niqab] until somebody demonstrates, namely the accused, that it will impact adversely on his fair trial rights …The onus I see is on the accused.”

But Chapman is bothered by the fact that she feels the defence has been given a big leg-up: “The Supreme Court has said demeanor matters.” Chapman said she was disappointed that the top court relied on tradition, in going by the common law practice that faces are seen in a courtroom.

“We live in a multicultural society. The fact that something is tradition is not an adequate answer to a human rights question,” Chapman said.

She also said that now a woman who wears a niqab will have to make a decision: “Do I seek justice or am I going to respect my religion?”

“That’s a big price to pay for justice,” Chapman said.

Case presented legal dilemma

The case of N.S. presented a legal dilemma: on the one side is a religious belief said to be sincerely held, and on the other, there’s the right of an accused to a full defence.

At a preliminary hearing, the woman explained she cannot show her face to any men who are not close relatives. The judge took brief unsworn evidence from her while her face remained covered, but did not allow counsel to examine her or call any evidence. The woman was ordered to remove her niqab in order to testify in court.

She objected to that judge’s order and appealed.

Ontario’s Superior Court first ruled, and then the Ontario Court of Apeal upheld a decision that quashed the first judge’s order to remove her face covering.

Lawyers for the accused men argued that facial cues “can be significant information that help the observer understand what a witness is attempting to communicate and get a sense of who the witness is and how he or she is reacting to questioning.”

The accused men’s lawyers also say that it is not clear whether the woman sees her niqab as a religious requirement, or as “a personal preference and a matter of comfort.”

Removed niqab on other occasions

Part of the court evidence is that the woman did remove her niqab to be photographed for a driver’s licence, in front of a female photographer. Lawyers for the accused men point out that her religious convictions were not so strong that she refused to go through the licensing process, even though the photo could be demanded by any number of police officers who might be men.

The Muslim Canadian Congress also argued that since N.S. had willingly removed her niqab for a driver’s licence photo, and had testified she would also remove it at a border crossing, then the courtroom also ought to be an exemption.

But, the woman’s lawyer argued that having a photograph taken for a driver’s licence is not analogous to testifying about intimate sexual details in a courtroom in front of strangers.

“What is religion for if not to bring comfort?” Butt argued.

Butt told CBC that the job of the court is not to be the arbiter of whether the practice of Islam really does require that women be completely covered. Although he conceded many see it as a symbol of female oppression, he thinks an order to remove it is another form of paternalism.

“At the centre is the notion of choice … some people’s choices will be distasteful to others,” the lawyer said.

Charitable Giving in Canada… Less than 1% of Income

The Fraser Institute: Quebec Last Among Provinces in Private Charitable Giving; Americans Overall More Generous Than Canadians

December 13, 2012  -

Quebec residents are the least generous among all Canadians according to an analysis of donations to registered charities claimed on personal income tax returns, released today by the Fraser Institute, Canada’s leading public policy think-tank.

Generosity in Canada and the United States: The 2012 Generosity Index measures and compares private monetary generosity in Canada’s 10 provinces and three territories, and in the 50 US states and Washington, DC using readily available data on the extent and depth of donations to registered charities claimed on personal income tax returns. The complete report is available (in English only) at www.institutfraser.org.

“This is the 14th consecutive year that Quebec has ranked last among the provinces on the Fraser Institute’s index of private charitable giving,” said Filip Palda, Fraser Institute senior fellow and professor at the École nationale d’administration publique.

“This generosity gap undoubtedly limits the ability of Quebec charities to serve their communities.”

Using personal tax return data from 2010 (the most recent year of comparable data available), the report Generosity in Canada and the United States: The 2012 Generosity Index found that Quebecers donated only 0.31 per cent of the total income earned in the province to registered charities, less than all other provinces. The report also found that just 21.9 per cent of Quebec tax filers claimed a charitable donation on their income tax return, ahead of only New Brunswick (21.3 per cent) and Newfoundland and Labrador (21.1 per cent).

Among Canadian jurisdictions, the report ranked Manitoba as the most generous overall, followed by Prince Edward Island and Saskatchewan. Alberta and Ontario tied for fourth.

Manitobans donated the highest share of total income at 0.92 per cent-nearly three times the amount donated by Quebecers (0.31 per cent). The Canadian average was 0.66 per cent.

“Had Quebecers donated the same share of total income as the Canadian average, Quebec charities would have received an additional $951.4 million in private monetary donations in 2010,” Palda said.

Manitoba also had the highest percentage of tax filers donating to registered charities (26.2 per cent), compared to 21.9 per cent of tax filers in Quebec.

For the average dollar value of charitable donations, which does not factor into the overall index, Quebec was last among the provinces and territories giving $641, less than half the national average of $1,469.

When the overall Generosity Index scores were compared across the 64 North American jurisdictions, Quebec placed 59th overall-the lowest-ranked Canadian province. Manitoba, Canada’s highest-ranked jurisdiction, tied for 39th overall.

Utah was once again the most generous jurisdiction in North America, with 34.0 per cent of tax filers donating 3.17 per cent of the total income earned in the state-more than 10 times the share of aggregate income donated by Quebecers.

No American state or Canadian province gave a lower share of its total income to charity than the 0.31 per cent donated in Quebec.

“While Americans tend to be much more generous than Canadians, Quebec has the dubious distinction of being the least generous province in Canada,” Palda said.

In comparing Quebec and the United States at the national level, private monetary generosity in the U.S. surpassed that of Quebec, with 26.7 per cent of American tax filers donating 1.38 per cent of total income to charity, compared to 21.9 per cent of Quebec tax filers donating 0.31 per cent of total income.

The report calculates that if Quebecers matched the generosity of their American neighbours, Quebec charities would have received an extra $2.9 billion in private contributions in 2010.

The Fraser Institute is an independent Canadian public policy research and educational organization with offices in Vancouver, Calgary, Toronto, and Montreal and ties to a global network of 86 think-tanks. Its mission is to measure, study, and communicate the impact of competitive markets and government intervention on the welfare of individuals. To protect the Institute’s independence, it does not accept grants from governments or contracts for research. Visit www.fraserinstitute.org.

Gender vs religion: Woman refused haircut by Muslim barber highlights problem of colliding rights

National Post, Sarah Boesveld, Nov 30, 2012

She may not have felt it in the moment — the day she called the Muslim barber a sexist for denying her a haircut due to the rules of his faith, turned on her heel and filed a complaint with the Ontario Human Rights Tribunal.

But now, after the ensuing media storm about her case two weeks ago, Faith McGregor is frank about how Omar Mahrouk’s right to religious freedom and her right to be free from gender discrimination coexist.

“They are equally important — they definitely are equally important,” the Toronto resident said in an interview this week. “They’re both steeped in history in their own right with regards to freedom of religion and what that means for the owner and the history of religion, [and] freedom of a woman to be able to be treated with respect and not be treated as something that’s subordinate to a man.”

Yet she also sees these rights as “diametrically opposed” — on contrary sides of the rights spectrum, hurtling towards one another in a crash of willful identity, in which each personal right feels too vital to concede. Human rights in gridlock with one another.

New Winnipeg police chief says comments on prayer to fight crime misconstrued

The Canadian Press  Wednesday, Oct. 24, 2012

WINNIPEG — Winnipeg’s new police chief stood by his comments on religion Wednesday — comments which have led to something of a baptism by fire in media relations.

Devon Clunis, a longtime police officer and chaplain who will take over as chief in December, has faced criticism for telling a Christian magazine that prayer could help reduce crime in the Manitoba capital.

“What would happen if we all just truly — I’m talking about all religious stripes here — started praying for the peace of this city and then actually started putting some action behind that?” he told Christian Week earlier this month. Continue reading