French religious leaders warn against planned Islam debate
By FRANCE 24 the 30/03/2011 - 14:39

One week before a parliamentary session on secularism and the role of Islam in 
France, French religious leaders have written an editorial casting doubt on a 
debate they say could fuel prejudice.

Ahead of a scheduled April 5 parliamentary session on secularism in French 
society, religious figures representing the six major faiths in France have 
co-signed a sweeping editorial denouncing the debate as a potential source of 
discrimination and confusion.

The initiative urged by French President Nicolas Sarkozy was originally framed, 
as ruling centre-right UMP party secretary Jean-François Copé stated last 
month, as a national conversation on "how to organise religious practice so 
that it is compatible in our country with the rules of our secular republics".

But following a February TV appearance in which Sarkozy wondered aloud what 
kind of "limits" needed to be placed on Islam in France, the debate has been 
increasingly viewed as specifically targeting the roughly 6 million Muslims 
residing in France. Indeed, the debate is now expected to address 
Islam-specific issues such as the financing of mosques and the ideological 
backgrounds of imams leading services.

If it ain't broke…

In the editorial published by French daily Le Parisien, Catholic, Protestant, 
Jewish, Orthodox, Muslim, and Buddhist leaders warned against "squandering the 
precious practice" of laïcité, France's particularly unflinching brand of 
secularism enshrined in a 1905 law officially separating the Catholic Church 
and the state.

According to French religious historian Odon Vallet, French religious 
insitutions – which were in the past "hostile" toward a policy they viewed as 
an official refusal to recognise God's existence – are "satisfied with the 
rather liberal way secularism is applied today". But in the context of recent 
French laws reinforcing secularism (a ban on headscarves, Jewish kippahs, and 
conspicuous crosses in public schools in 2004 and a ban of the head-to-toe 
burqa in public just last year), their opposition to the parliamentary debate 
is likely motivated, in part, by "a fear of a more rigorous application of laws 
affecting religious garb or religious dietary restrictions".

Sticking up for Islam, distancing themselves from the Right

Given the fact that the debate about secularism in France has largely centred 
around Islam, the editorial also implicitly suggests what Vallet called "a 
solidarity with the Muslim community of France". The religious leaders who 
signed the text indeed advise "during this pre-electoral period to stay the 
course by avoiding lumping things together and risking stigmatisation".

Sarkozy and far-right leader - and potential 2012 presidential rival - Marine 
Le Pen have recently been placing significant emphasis on issues of Islam and 
immigration, and the letter indicates what Vallet referred to as "a distancing 
of the religious leaders from these two politicians".

Socialists have accused Sarkozy of launching a debate that amounts to a veiled 
crackdown on Muslims in France in a bid to win back right-wing voters who 
drifted to the National Front in last week's local elections.

But even within Sarkozy's own party, the debate has stirred controversy. Prime 
Minister François Fillon, considered a moderate, has questioned the wisdom of 
engaging in a debate that could result in the stigmatisation of French Muslims.
 
Source URL: 
http://www.france24.com/en/20110330-france-religious-leaders-speak-out-against-secularism-debate-islam-sarkozy-le-pen




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