Muslim, civil liberties groups challenge Quebec school prayer room ban in court
MONTREAL — A civil rights organization and a national Muslim advocacy group are the latest to launch a legal challenge of Quebec’s decree banning prayer rooms in public schools.
The National Council of Canadian Muslims and the Canadian Civil Liberties Association are seeking a judicial review of the government decree on behalf of a plaintiff whose teenage son had sought a space to pray along with some other Muslim students at a Montreal-area high school last October.
The school provided a space as of January for about 20 to 30 boys and girls, but it was rescinded in May after the school began applying Education Minister Bernard Drainville’s ban.
Drainville has said the concept of prayer rooms runs counter to Quebec’s policy of official secularism and his April 19 directive states that school space cannot be used for the purposes of religious practices such as open prayers.