Senator Bacik speaking on the death penalty and religion in schools.
Order of Business
Senator Ivana Bacik: I support other Senators in expressing their condemnation of the imposition of the death penalty in the high profile case in the
I would like to contribute to the debate on democracy by asking the Leader for a debate on religion in schools and the place of religion in education. If we live in a democracy rather than a theocracy or Christian democracy, we must be concerned about the very prominent role the churches, especially the Catholic church, continue to play in the provision of primary and secondary education. I speak in light of the decision by the European Court of Human Rights last week in the case of Lautsi v. Italy, in which the court held that the presence of crucifixes and religions symbols in the classroom was in breach of the rights, established in the European Convention on Human Rights, of the applicant and her children who wished to be educated in a secular way and not to be exposed to the symbols of one particular religion.
I ask that we debate this, in particular the role of the integrated curriculum, whereby children are still receiving religious instruction during school hours in breach, I would say, of their rights under Article 44 of the Constitution and under the European Convention on Human Rights. Article 44 says children have a right to attend publicly funded schools without receiving religious instruction in those schools against their parents’ wishes. I ask the Leader to organise a debate on this urgently.
