Tag: Prayers

  • Prayer rooms are prohibited in Quebec schools

    Prayer rooms are prohibited in Quebec schools

    Canada Global (Web News) The vow to outlaw prayer rooms in classrooms is being carried out by the minister of education in Quebec.

    Late on Wednesday, Bernard Drainville issued an order for schools to make sure that no area is used for prayer or other religious activities.

    The directive follows Drainville’s statement earlier this month that at least two schools in the Montreal region allowed kids to meet for prayer.

    According to him, schools are not centres of worship, and the idea of prayer rooms is incompatible with Quebec’s declared secularism.

    The order notes that the Quebec Charter of Human Rights and Freedoms recognises both the value of secularism and religious freedom.

    According to Drainville, he is unable to outright forbid students from praying, but he has advised them to do so quietly and covertly.

  • Muslim groups promise to monitor Quebec ban on school prayer spaces

    Muslim groups promise to monitor Quebec ban on school prayer spaces

    Canada Global (Web News) Muslim organisations are protesting the Quebec government’s plan to outlaw prayer rooms in public schools and pledging to keep an eye on how the Education Department applies its new regulations.

    Education Minister Bernard Drainville pledged last week to forbid schools from doing so in response to news that at least two schools in the Montreal region had designated areas for Muslim students to pray. But the minister assured reporters that he wouldn’t outright forbid prayer. Instead, he advised pupils to pray “discreetly” and “quietly.”

    The National Council of Canadian Muslims announced on Monday that it would monitor how the government implemented the ban on prayer rooms and that it would “take action” if the rights of students were infringed.

    According to the council’s chief executive officer, Stephen Brown, “we haven’t actually seen how it is going to materially impact individuals.” Hence, “we would do something, we would take action, (if) these guidelines would actually constitute in effect a limitation on people’s fundamental rights.”

    When asked if Drainville’s order had been followed, the Education Department remained silent on Monday.

    Throughout the course of the previous week’s 24 hours, Drainville’s stance hardened. He stated that schools could not favour one religion over another and that they had to make sure the spaces supported gender equality in his first response to news of school prayer areas. But as the Parti Québécois demanded tougher action, he immediately altered his mind, claiming Drainville’s initial accommodative posture would encourage additional schools to open up prayer rooms.

    When the PQ was in power in 2013, Drainville is renowned for introducing a purported values charter. Those who wear religious symbols should not be allowed to work in public institutions, according to the charter. The charter served as a model for Bill 21, a secularism bill introduced by the Coalition Avenir Québec in 2019 that forbids many public employees, including teachers, from donning religious garb at work. Before the elections in 2022, the minister switched to the CAQ.

    According to civil rights attorney Julius Grey, Quebec schools are not required to provide prayer rooms under Bill 21. Yet if the government outright forbids students from praying, it might find itself in legal difficulties.

    “A bar on people praying in schools would be utterly opposed to the Charter — and I think will get struck down,” Grey said in an interview on Monday. They won’t, in my opinion; to do so would be to invite difficulty.

    The minister should have consulted community leaders before banning school prayer areas, according to the Table de concertation des organismes musulmans, a coalition of Muslim groups and mosques that condemned Drainville’s decision last week.

    Hassan Guillet, a Montreal imam, called the issue a “tempest in a teacup,” claiming that politicians and media outlets had implied that Muslim pupils praying in class was somehow sinister. According to him, Ramadan sees an increase in the number of Muslims who pray five times daily.

  • Ramadan moon likely to be sighted on March 22

    Ramadan moon likely to be sighted on March 22

    Canada Global (Web News) The anticipated start of Ramadan in Pakistan was declared by the Department of Meteorology Climate Data Processing Center.

    According to the center’s forecast, there is a good chance that on March 22 the Ramadan moon will be visible.

    At 10:23 PM on March 21, the moon is predicted to be born. The Climate Data Processing Center also forecasts that on March 22, the moon will likely be clear and partly overcast, setting at 6:44 p.m. and rising at 7:32 p.m., respectively.

    The moon will be 22 hours and 44 minutes old in Karachi at the time of sunset. The centre also points out that 48 minutes after sunset, the moon will probably still be visible.

    Muslims all across the world commemorate Ramadan, the ninth month of the Islamic calendar, as a time for fasting, prayer, and introspection. Ramadan’s precise start date is determined by the moon’s sighting, which changes by location and year.

    Muslims in Pakistan eagerly await the news of Ramadan’s anticipated arrival date since it signals the beginning of a month-long period of spiritual meditation and worship.