ebia
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- Jul 6, 2004
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Presumably in reaction to the situation in Europe at the time.I think you miss my point.
If I understand the situation correctly, the state provides schools that are paid for by the taxpayer.
Let's now say you have two families who both pay taxes to fund the schools. One is a Jewish family who want their child to receive education in the Jewish faith in an environment that adheres to the Kosher laws. The other is an atheist family who wish their child to receive a completely secular education.
Neither can afford to educate their children privately.
The state is willing to provide the education that the atheist family wants for their child, but the Jewish family, despite paying the same taxes, are denied.
It strikes me as odd that secularism in education is the default position.
How did this occur?
Much of the world manages fine without feeling that artificial boundaries need to be created between religion and the rest of life.
Schools have to cater for all their population, but that does not have to exclude all reference to religion - indeed to do that is, as you've noted, implicitly pushing one viewpoint on religion.
Schools in diverse communities need to enable the diverse expression of those communities, not stifle it.
It's worth noting that here, where state schools are not as anti-religous as yours, we have an increasing number of parents choosing to send their children to faith schools even when those faith schools are not of their faith. Catholic schools, for example, are taking an increasing number of Islamic students who's parents would rather they attended a faith school of a different faith than a secular school.
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