Muslim groups promise to monitor Quebec ban on school prayer spaces
MONTREAL — Muslim groups are speaking out against the Quebec government’s intention to ban prayer spaces in public schools, saying they will monitor how the Education Department enforces its new rules.
In response to reports that at least two Montreal-area schools had reserved spaces for Muslim students to pray, Education Minister Bernard Drainville promised last week to prohibit schools from doing so. The minister, however, said he wouldn’t ban prayer altogether; students who wanted to pray should do so “discreetly” and “silently,” he told reporters.
The National Council of Canadian Muslims said Monday it would keep tabs on how the government enforced the ban on prayer spaces, adding that it would “take action” if the rights of students were violated.
“We haven’t actually seen how that is going to tangibly impact people,” Stephen Brown, chief executive officer of the council, said in an interview. “So (if) these directives would in fact constitute in practice a limitation on people’s fundamental rights, then we would do something, we would take action.”