Thats because...It has the largest number of followers of a religion in Canada with 46% of Canadians (13,070,000 as of 2008) baptized as Catholics
..I believe they have some pull..dont you think.
That really only explains current status rather than why they are deserving of special accomodation.
No ... I'd say the big issue is number 2. I'm fine with using public facilities for worship; but excluding people based on their gender ... and their ... good grief ... their menstrual cycle is barbaric and bigoted.
Do you exclude based on skin colour and sexual preference as well? What do you do with transgendered?
It's not acceptable in a civilized society. If your religion requires this ... then either fix your religion ... or stay out public spaces.
There's no reason that the religion can't change ... it's changed enough times in the past.
I'm calling you on this one. This would make the population of Canada only 28-million in 2008. There is something wrong with those numbers.
Islam is admittedly and in many ways, quite rigid. There are a number of rules (either explicitly stated in the Quran as primary authority) or derived from the actions/sayings/teachings of the Prophet Muhammad (because not every single situation is covered in the Quran).
So what this means is that, if a situation is covered by either source, it teaches the rest of the people how to behave or act. Menstruation is something that is indeed covered, based on a hadith (which is translated as instruction of the Prophet, as relayed by another). The one covering menstruation goes as follows:
The Messenger of Allah, sal Allahu `alayhi wa sallam, said to Fatimah bint Abu Habish, “Do not pray during your period. After it has ended, perform ghusl and pray.†(Related by Bukhari and Muslim).
So this is taken as, menstruating females do not pray. The girls who are being 'excluded' arent in reality, they are simply following the teachings as best as they can.
As it relates to positional locations, its a mixture of tradition and hadiths. Some might argue that its a modesty thing (in a very broad sense, guys are pigs, and would stare at the behind of a woman bent over in front of him, praying or not).
So please, dont hate on the idea because of the way prayers have been organized. I cant speak specifically for any girl who has to sit out prayers because she is menstruating, or has to pray at the back of the room, but I feel she is most likely not concerned about these issues, so I hope that you arent either.
You cant just change religion (or not Islam anyways).
Or better yet move to a Muslim country, try teaching Christianity in school in a Muslim country and see how long you last. I don't want my tax dollars going towards any religious school especially a religion with such stone age views as Islam. Catholics make up a large portion of the country, the religious education in Catholic schools is nothing like it was 50 years ago. You want to learn about God do it on Sundays!
As mentioned below, what others do in another country really shouldnt have bearing on Canada. I'd be the first to admit alot of them as backwards. Doesn't mean you do the reverse here.
If it's not hurting their grades, it's a reasonable accomodation that keeps them at school on Fridays and keeps them in the TDSB where they're more likely to come into contact with dissenting ideas (for example, the idea that men and women should pray together) that will drive change. I'm hesitant to tell anyone how to practise their religious beliefs, but perhaps the solution to the gender issue should be to just remove the mandatory separation. Let the students themselves decide where they want to pray - most of them will probably just do what they're already doing anyways.
As for Catholic schools - Catholics are the largest religious denomination in Canada, mostly due to the fact that Quebec is overwhelmingly, nominally Catholic. In Ontario (as well as other provinces that have/had denominational schools), a large Catholic population pressured the government for years for separate schooling because the public schools were essentially Protestant schools. That's no longer true (although, I believe, at least one government-funded Protestant school still exists), so the justification for separate schools no longer exists. Other provinces (Quebec, Newfoundland) have already done away with the separate schools.
An aim of schooling should be to expose children to diversity so that they can function properly in a very diverse society. That means getting people from multiple backgrounds into the public system, which means accomodating and respecting their differences. It is far preferable to have some Muslim students go say their prayers at school once a week and maintain strong personal and intellectual connections with the rest of the community than to have them sequestered off to their own schools, or, as some have ridiculously suggested, their own countries (both of which hurt non-Muslim students just as much as the Muslim ones).
Good post. I'll just state that the idea of giving choice, while it may seem practical, likely wouldnt fly with the traditional thoughts of the childrens parents. Islam is pretty set in how things are done. That I will not deny. There are reasons that this is the way it is. Maybe you accept them, maybe you dont.
With also over than 10 million christians (other than catholics) in Canada ...what ever happened to the lords prayer in schools.
Before my time. If I was to guess, I would say that non-Christians didnt like the idea of being forcibly subjected to a prayer of a religion they do not subscribe to. An excerpt from wikipedia: The Ontario Court of Appeal ruled that the regulation infringed religious freedom because schools could use only the Lord's Prayer rather than a more inclusive approach. The exemption provision actually stigmatized children and coerced them into a religious observance which was offensive to them.
That is probably why it was abandoned, which I think is completely different from what is happening here. No one is forcing the children to take part in Islamic prayers.
This shouldn't be about what they do in other countries. We're not allowed to discriminate against Minority X because in Xrovia they discriminate against Y.
I don't want my tax dollars going to any religious school especially a religion with such stone age views as Catholic.
You can't make an issue about this and ignore the elephant in the room. Data about how predominant Catholics are in Canada are irrelevant. Many, if not most of the Catholics are in Quebec ... and they banned the funding of Catholic schools in Quebec years ago! Why Ontario hasn't done the same mystifies me.
Good first point. I also dont understand how it is that Catholic schools still get special funding in Ontario. While I'd personally prefer no funding of religious schools, I think things need to be applied consistently.