Quebec judge refuses to hear women's case until she removed Hijab

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"...you are wearing a scarf as a religious symbol?"

"Yes."

"In my opinion the courtroom is a secular place and a secular space. There are no religious symbols in this room, not on the walls and not on the persons. Article 13 of the regulation of the court of Quebec states, 'any person appearing before the court must be suitably dressed.' In my opinion you are not suitably dressed. Decorum is important, for example hats and sunglasses are not allowed, and I don't see why scarves on the head would be either. The same rules need to be applied to everyone. I will therefore not hear you if you are wearing a scarf on your head, just as I would not allow a person to appear before me wearing a hat or sunglasses on his or her head or any other garment not suitable for a court proceeding. ..."​

This is petty bullshit at best, and at worst, religious discrimination. Her opinion about 'suitable clothing' would preclude certain citizens from being able to participate in a court of law because of their religion. You don't wear a hat or sunglasses out of respect to the court - no shit. Religious clothing is not disrespectful; it is completely suitable attire in modern society. It's also not a choice for certain faiths. When a 'secular' entity make rules against how one chooses to practice their religion, they cease to be secular. The rule she sites makes no mention of hijabs or anything specific; the one sentence she read is the entire rule.

do they not swear on holy texts in quebec?
 
do they not swear on holy texts in quebec?

I looked it up and yup. Apparently they give you an assortment of religious texts to chose from or you can just 'affirm' if you'd like. The entire basis of this judge's opinion, that there are "no religious symbols in this room", is flat out wrong. She's either a moron or a bigoted moron.
 
I stand corrected.
No doubt this judge has gotten into trouble, then.

Interesting how different justice courts can come to diametrically opposed conclusions on this question : European Court of Human Rights considered that religious freedom neither protected any act motived or inspired by religion, nor always granted the right to behave accordingly to some religious beliefs, basically (Court was examining the case of France banning any religious signs from public schools).
 
I stand corrected.
No doubt this judge has gotten into trouble, then.

Interesting how different justice courts can come to diametrically opposed conclusions on this question : European Court of Human Rights considered that religious freedom neither protected any act motived or inspired by religion, nor always granted the right to behave accordingly to some religious beliefs, basically (Court was examining the case of France banning any religious signs from public schools).

Europe as a whole is significantly less (legally) tolerant of speech and religion than the States or Canada, so it's not really surprising.
 
No shit. I don't post much anymore, but I'm quite taken aback at how many people here would shit all over human rights in the name of "secularism".
If it were up to me I would treat hijabs and other religious clothing the same as hats, etc: If you must have a rule against it, then that rule applies the same to religious and non-religious clothing. That's because I don't think a court of law is a place to make allowances for fairy tale beliefs. Also get rid of the fucking bibles, torahs, qurans, etc, for swearing oaths.

You've got a funny definition of "human rights". (as long as we are throwing around scare quotes for no apparent reason)
 
It's threads like these in which the real bigots come out and show their true colours.

bigotry exists everywhere, even minorities can be as bigoted as the majority

but back to the story, the Judge misinterpreted the rules IMO and the judge was wrong in "this" case.

Premiere Philippe Couillard has been dogged for over a year for "doing nothing" about secularism and religious accommodations. He is forced to come up with legislation this summer because the local media and opposition parties bring this up daily.
 
If it were up to me I would treat hijabs and other religious clothing the same as hats, etc: If you must have a rule against it, then that rule applies the same to religious and non-religious clothing. That's because I don't think a court of law is a place to make allowances for fairy tale beliefs. Also get rid of the fucking bibles, torahs, qurans, etc, for swearing oaths.

You've got a funny definition of "human rights".

Lol weren't you advocating affirmative action for ugly people. That's a weirder definition of human rights to me.

http://m.neogaf.com/showthread.php?t=741928&page=3
 
No shit. I don't post much anymore, but I'm quite taken aback at how many people here would shit all over human rights in the name of "secularism".

I used to be into the atheist community on YouTube and elsewhere, but the antagonism against the religious got to be too much and I had to bail. It's just not healthy to be that angry all the time, especially about shit you cannot change. It sucks how the moderate voices in any community inevitably get drowned out by zealots.
 
If it were up to me I would treat hijabs and other religious clothing the same as hats, etc: If you must have a rule against it, then that rule applies the same to religious and non-religious clothing. That's because I don't think a court of law is a place to make allowances for fairy tale beliefs. Also get rid of the fucking bibles, torahs, qurans, etc, for swearing oaths.

You've got a funny definition of "human rights". (as long as we are throwing around scare quotes for no apparent reason)

I'm sort of torn between just throwing a fedoratipping.gif and seriously responding. How firmly do you believe that religion is just "fairy tale beliefs," and that it's no different from any other method of choosing garments?
 
Lol weren't you advocating affirmative action for ugly people. That's a weirder definition of human rights to me.
You must be thinking of someone else.

Do you really think wearing a scarf on your head during a singular event like a court hearing is a matter of human rights? Wearing tinfoil on your head in court because you believe aliens are listening is a matter of human rights too then.

I'm sort of torn between just throwing a fedoratipping.gif and seriously responding. How firmly do you believe that religion is just "fairy tale beliefs," and that it's no different from any other method of choosing garments?
Your joke is trite and religion is bullshit. I don't know how you got to a debate on methods of choosing garments, when we are talking about rules on what a court will allow. They can require everyone to wear hats for all I care, but I don't see supernatural beliefs as a reason to start making exceptions, tying in human rights, and treating a scraf with hushed reverence.

If the rules were up to me from the outset, I wouldn't have the sort of clothing restrictions this court has to begin with.
 
You must be thinking of someone else.

Do you really think wearing a scarf on your head during a singular event like a court hearing is a matter of human rights? Wearing tinfoil on your head in court because you believe aliens are listening is a matter of human rights too then.

Well, the main difference I see is that one is a large part of a person's identity (and has been a source of persecution throughout history) and the other is the result of a mental illness.
 
You must be thinking of someone else.

Do you really think wearing a scarf on your head during a singular event like a court hearing is a matter of human rights?

She was being forced to commit a sinful act according to her faith just in order to be heard in a court of law. The Supreme Court of Canada has already stated that this kind of treatment is not lawful. They also don't force you to swear on a Bible, because that would be wrong for a very similar reason. If you want freedom from religion, then you also want freedom of religion.
 
You must be thinking of someone else.

Do you really think wearing a scarf on your head during a singular event like a court hearing is a matter of human rights? Wearing tinfoil on your head in court because you believe aliens are listening is a matter of human rights too then.

When an authority figure uses it as justification to deny you due process in a court of law? Yes.
 
If it were up to me I would treat hijabs and other religious clothing the same as hats, etc: If you must have a rule against it, then that rule applies the same to religious and non-religious clothing. That's because I don't think a court of law is a place to make allowances for fairy tale beliefs. Also get rid of the fucking bibles, torahs, qurans, etc, for swearing oaths.

You've got a funny definition of "human rights". (as long as we are throwing around scare quotes for no apparent reason)

Freedom of religion is a basic right.
 
You must be thinking of someone else.

Do you really think wearing a scarf on your head during a singular event like a court hearing is a matter of human rights? Wearing tinfoil on your head in court because you believe aliens are listening is a matter of human rights too then.


Your joke is trite and religion is bullshit. I don't know how you got to a debate on methods of choosing garments, when we are talking about rules on what a court will allow. They can require everyone to wear hats for all I care, but I don't see supernatural beliefs as a reason to start tying in human rights and treat a scraf with hushed reverence.

if an elected Federal MP can wear a turban in the House of Commons... I don't see what the problem is with a woman plaintiff/defendant showing up in court with hijab headscarf.
 
When an authority figure uses it as justification to deny you due process in a court of law? Yes.
The difference for me is this: Say we have two people wearing headwear, one a baseball cap and the other a hijab, and the court requires them to remove those. Both refuse and are denied a hearing. While I think the whole concept of a garment bringing a court of law to a standstill is ridiculous, both of those people made a free choice and neither one is having their rights violated by being given this choice. Basically I'm saying that I don't have a high regard for superstition.

Lol weren't you advocating affirmative action for ugly people. That's a weirder definition of human rights to me.

http://m.neogaf.com/showthread.php?t=741928&page=3
There is a massive, MASSIVE difference between saying that it should be illegal for businesses to have a standing discrimination policy against ugly applicants, and advocating affirmative action for ugly people.
 
Well, the main difference I see is that one is a large part of a person's identity (and has been a source of persecution throughout history) and the other is the result of a mental illness.

Who are you to decide whether one person's beliefs are more valid than another person's beliefs? While I disagree with what the judge did, religious beliefs don't deserve any special treatment. If someone believes that they need to wear a tinfoil hat in court, they should be allowed to do so. As long as what they wear doesn't cover their face, I see no reason to force them to remove it.
 
The difference for me is this: Say we have two people wearing headwear, one a baseball cap and the other a hijab, and the court requires them to remove those. Both refuse and are denied a hearing. While I think the whole concept of a garment bringing a court of law to a standstill is ridiculous, both of those people made a free choice and neither one is having their rights violated by being given this choice.

what about cancer ladies who lost their hair who wear a bandanna?
 
Who are you to decide whether one person's beliefs are more valid than another person's beliefs? While I disagree with what the judge did, religious beliefs don't deserve any special treatment. If someone believes that they need to wear a tinfoil hat in court, they should be allowed to do so. As long as what they wear doesn't cover their face, I see no reason to force them to remove it.

Eh. Fair enough.
 
Her lawyer

My-Cousin-Vinny.jpg
 
So, do people sleep with a hijab on?

"A hijab is a veil that covers the head and chest, which is particularly worn by some Muslim women beyond the age of puberty in the presence of adult males outside of their immediate family and, according to some interpretations, in the presence of adult non-Muslim females outside of their immediate family." - Wikipedia
 
what about cancer ladies who lost their hair who wear a bandanna?
This is what I would consider a practical need.

I will say again, although I'm sure I can say it a thousand times and have it still ignored: I don't favor strict dress codes in general and would not choose to create a rule against hats. In both business and government, it's all a bunch of nonsense to project so much meaning on to certain kinds of clothing and pretend that a pair of sandals here or a tshirt there is going to harm something. I think it's really just a proxy way for bosses, judges, etc to assert their authority over others.

I just don't have any more respect for the idea that a woman showing her hair is a big no-no to the sky wizard (everyone keeps saying its a choice though...) than I do for someone wearing the aforementioned tinfoil hat because they believe Xenu will audit their private thoughts. The only difference between the two beliefs is the passage of time, but one is apparently a victim of human rights abuse and the other is a crackpot.

Who are you to decide whether one person's beliefs are more valid than another person's beliefs? While I disagree with what the judge did, religious beliefs don't deserve any special treatment. If someone believes that they need to wear a tinfoil hat in court, they should be allowed to do so. As long as what they wear doesn't cover their face, I see no reason to force them to remove it.
Thank you.
 
What a ridiculous and petty judge, and I can't believe there are people here supporting her. Freedom of religion is a basic human right

I'm of the opinion no form of religious garb, or any ounce of religion should be anywhere near a court of law, or the law itself (outside of those that protect religious people from scrutiny based off their religion as people should be allowed to believe what they want to without getting hatred for it if they're not using it to incite hatred).

By bringing religion into a court of law you run the risk of a jury treating a defendant or witness differently and while that's a problem of someone on the jury being either an idiot or a horrible person, it's still a big risk to need to avoid.

I am sorry, but this is nonsense, and sounds like a rule a racist would heavily abuse.

Using this logic:

By bringing race into a court of law you run the risk of a jury treating a defendant or witness differently and while that's a problem of someone on the jury being either an idiot or a horrible person, it's still a big risk to need to avoid. So, if a defendant is from a minority group, they should be painted white for the trial, or a white stunt double should be hired for the trial.
 
What a ridiculous and petty judge, and I can't believe there are people here supporting her. Freedom of religion is a basic human right



I am sorry, but this is nonsense, and sounds like a rule a racist would heavily abuse.

Using this logic:

By bringing race into a court of law you run the risk of a jury treating a defendant or witness differently and while that's a problem of someone on the jury being either an idiot or a horrible person, it's still a big risk to need to avoid. So, if a defendant is from a minority group, they should be painted white for the trial, or a white stunt double should be hired for the trial.
This logic seems prevalent. This first comment in the Journal de Montréal article that gutter_trush linked was something like "we require you to remove your hijab to protect YOU in case the judge is prejudiced". Like seriously wat

It's funny how racist complain about accommodating people and then they want minorities to jump through hoops to accommodate them.
 
Power trip from a Judge, well I would never imagine! Doesn't need to be racist, just a asshole. I never heard of it happening before and I'm in Quebec, this is just stupidity from yet another human being. Sometimes, it just ain't about a province,state, country, religious belief or the race.
 
I feel like I'm in bizarro GAF reading the first page. does Canada not have the freedom of religious expression or something? Are the people in this thread against her just ignorant?
 
Imagine there is an expert witness wearing some religious garment in a trial.

The expert witness has to provide an expert opinion; their belief derived from the facts of the scenario and their knowledge. Bias EXISTS in every judicial system, we can’t eliminate it completely but where we can eliminate it we SHOULD.

This expert witness, who has a religious belief completely irrelevant to their area of expertise, believes their faith – which is based on very little- is true and holds it above all other faiths.

How can you eliminate the bias this person would receive, from those that do not share this persons beliefs, with respect to their expert testimony? Is it not better that we do not see this persons beliefs written on them???

Of course, a proper expert witness SHOULDN’T receive any bias and I am not saying that in my example situation the religious expert deserves any. But if they are dressed appropriately for the court setting than this eliminates some potential bias that may be directed at them.

Secularism is integral to the justice system in eliminating bias and thus integral in the search for justice.
I don’t agree with the SCC decision for this reason.
 
I feel like I'm in bizarro GAF reading the first page. does Canada not have the freedom of religious expression or something? Are the people in this thread against her just ignorant?
I think it has to do with her religion. I don't think any one would be supporting the judge if she was saying the same thing to a Sikh.
 
It says the same thing in French.
Except Morrigan Stark insisted she was specifically speaking of the civil court, which has its own rules.
299. Nul n'est admis à déposer, sous peine de nullité de sa déposition, s'il n'a fait le serment de dire la vérité.

Dans tous les cas, le tribunal doit voir à ce que la formule du serment, laquelle consiste à faire l'affirmation solennelle de dire la vérité, toute la vérité et rien que la vérité, soit lue au témoin de manière qu'il la comprenne bien.​
You're simply asked for solemn affirmation to tell the truth, the whole truth, and only the truth. Like it happens in France, for example.
No Bible or Queen option, here.
 
I feel like I'm in bizarro GAF reading the first page. does Canada not have the freedom of religious expression or something? Are the people in this thread against her just ignorant?

The online atheist community was overtaken by popular, militant anti-theists some years ago. Now whenever the issue of religious freedom comes up, there's undoubtedly going to a vocal bunch who feel no shame in espousing their intolerance towards the religious as if it's some kind of enlightened or reasonable way to act in public. Then there's probably Islamophobes, which I don't even want to get into since it's so unfounded and embarassing to witness.
 
What absolutely ridiculous and bigoted nonsense. This is when rule making goes too far. Her wearing a hijab is a religious garment which is intrinsic to her way of life and identity, and completely harmless to any one but those with strong prejudice, xenophobia or general anti religious sentiment, which is a fault of their own and not hers, and as such not something she should be punished or discriminated against for.

I'm glad this was over turned, and if the judge has not been consistent with this rule for other religious garments (Jewish kippahs, veils, Sikh turbans etc), she should be properly reprimanded, punished and fired from her duty. Hell, if she simply wrongly punished and embarrassed her for this, the same should follow.
 
You must be thinking of someone else.

Do you really think wearing a scarf on your head during a singular event like a court hearing is a matter of human rights?

It absolutely is.

Your joke is trite and religion is bullshit.

Sorry but it's not no matter how much your vocal minority wish it were. The condemnation this has received just ilustrates how out of touch you are.
 
It's crazy that people think there is anything practical, productive or useful about asking a woman to remove her hijab in court.


1. Nothing of value can be ascertained from seeing her hair.

2. The arbitrary nature of 'dress code' is something that can, should and will continue to be fought against for a whole manner of different reasons - fuck my hair (dreads) would be considered bad etiquette by quite a few people, but if I have to cut my hair before I go to court, it's some bullshit.

3. All this does is further create unnecessary conflict and strife.

4. Basically every federal entity who's commented on this has said it was a dumb decision, and from some language I've read, it implies the judge might want to undo her decision but she actually can't. This whole thing was a dumb ass kerfuffle by a dumb ass judge.

5. Don't let your dislike for religion, Islam or otherwise, make you act foolish. I am extremely vocal about my dislike for Islam, but that doesn't mean we should hamstring ourselves and tie ourselves up in stupid legislative decisions just to spite a woman who was doing a routine visit to the courts. For the non-religious in you who want to ideally bring more people into being non-religious, this sort of shit is the -last- thing you want to do. You want to seem inviting, open, and respectful - not a belligerent ass.
 
Except Morrigan Stark insisted he was specifically speaking of the civil court, which has its own rules.
299. Nul n'est admis à déposer, sous peine de nullité de sa déposition, s'il n'a fait le serment de dire la vérité.

Dans tous les cas, le tribunal doit voir à ce que la formule du serment, laquelle consiste à faire l'affirmation solennelle de dire la vérité, toute la vérité et rien que la vérité, soit lue au témoin de manière qu'il la comprenne bien.​
You're simply asked for solemn affirmation to tell the truth, the whole truth, and only the truth. Like it happens in France, for example.
No Bible or Queen option, here.

You are right for that particular court. Still, the judge is lawfully wrong and violated the Charter. It's funny because you would expect a Judge to know this basic thing.
 
As if I needed another reminder of how many people on this site can be incredibly disingenuous and completely devoid of empathy. Sigh :/
 
I apologize if I seemed aggressive, it was 4 in the morning and one of my biggest pet peeves is people putting words in my mouth during a discussion. I though it was pretty obvious that I meant that the act of allowing swearing on the bible was going against secular principles. I mean there's even a period there to separate the two statements.

I would say it's you who wasn't discussing in good faith by putting words in my mouth to further your argument, that is more offensive than my use of colourful language.
I actually agree with the notion that a strawman is more offensive than colourful language, believe it or not. But in my case it was not an intentional one, I simply misunderstood. Your phrasing was a bit weird, but I accept that I made a mistake and I apologize. Moving on...

More like I need French lessons. My reading level of French is very basic and we are on an English forum, so I would appreciate that you either post English links or, at the very least translate the text to English.

Either way, that is not a good source for your claims as the official website of Justice Quebec directly contradicts that article:

http://www.justice.gouv.qc.ca/englis.../temoins-a.htm
http://www.justice.gouv.qc.ca/englis...emoins-j-a.htm

It does not make a distinction between the civil court or federal court. So unless you provide an official link backing up your claims(that only one news outlet seems to be reporting), it would make more sense to accept the official wording, no?

I don't disagree with you on swearing an oath to the Queen, but that really has no relation to the topic at hand.
It does not because this source is specifically about criminal law.
Here's another source saying the same thing as the first article I linked:
http://www.lapresse.ca/le-soleil/ac...6-serment-sur-la-bible-au-choix-des-juges.php
Sorry for the French sources but hey we are talking about Québec law. Here it says:
À l'encontre de la loi

Le militant du MLQ insiste par ailleurs sur le fait qu'en matière civile, le serment sur la Bible ou sur tout autre livre sacré n'a pas sa place. «C'est le Code de procédure civile du Québec qui s'applique, et celui-ci ne prévoit que l'affirmation solennelle. Si un greffier propose la Bible ou tout autre texte religieux, il le fait par tradition et à l'encontre de la loi

Le MLQ avait d'ailleurs rappelé à l'ordre la commission Charbonneau à ce sujet en septembre 2012. «La greffière demandait aux témoins s'ils voulaient prêter serment sur la Bible ou faire une affirmation solennelle, se souvient M. Baril. On a dit à la commission Charbonneau que cette façon de faire n'était pas conforme avec la législation en vigueur.»
Translation:
The MLQ (Movement Laïc Québécois or "Movement for Secular Québec") insists that in civil cases, there is no place for an oath sworn on the Bible or any other sacred text. "It's the Civil Procedure Code that should be applied, and this one only considers solemn affirmation. If a court clerk allows a Bible or any other religious text, he or she does so by tradition and goes against the law.

The MLQ also called out the Charbonneau commission about this in September 2012. "The court clerk asked witnesses if they wanted to swear an oath on the Bible or make a solemn affirmation," remembers Mr. Baril. "We told the Charbonneau Commission that this way of doing things goes against current legislation."


Except Morrigan Stark insisted he was specifically speaking of the civil court, which has its own rules.
299. Nul n'est admis à déposer, sous peine de nullité de sa déposition, s'il n'a fait le serment de dire la vérité.

Dans tous les cas, le tribunal doit voir à ce que la formule du serment, laquelle consiste à faire l'affirmation solennelle de dire la vérité, toute la vérité et rien que la vérité, soit lue au témoin de manière qu'il la comprenne bien.​
You're simply asked for solemn affirmation to tell the truth, the whole truth, and only the truth. Like it happens in France, for example.
No Bible or Queen option, here.
Thanks for the official source. I tried googling and could only find articles and those government sites are crap to navigate.
(I'm a she, btw.)
 
Total bullshit. I've lived in Canada almost all my life, I'm a red blooded Canadian who would put his life on the line for this country because it's the best country in the world, the hijab in no way, shape or form infringes on Canadian culture or value.

The tolerance for all the cultures of the world, as long as it's harmless, is what makes Canada the best country in the world. I know Harper has been trying to change that perception with Canadians, but it's been harder for him than he thought because Canadians(other than Quebec nationalists/purists and Albertan rednecks) generally don't put up with intolerance.



Moving goalposts doesn't look good for your argument. If you can't tell one hijabi from another simply because of her hijab, you're a moron, simple as that.

edit:



Again, read my post from earlier: http://www.neogaf.com/forum/showpost.php?p=154054283&postcount=200

You're right that you don't have to swear by the bible but your only other option is a solemn affirmation. Doesn't sound secular to me, maybe this idiotic judge should fight against that first before picking a fight with someone who didn't mean any harm by wearing a headscarf.
Eh albertan rednecks elected a Muslim mayor of Calgary something that would never happen in Montreal or Quebec city
 
Eh albertan rednecks elected a Muslim mayor of Calgary something that would never happen in Montreal or Quebec city

I don't know if Calgary standards are across the board in Alberta though but the diversity is growing especially since the last oil booms. More and more people from around the country and world are looking for work here.
 
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