How a Montreal school reignited a debate over secularism and Bill 21 in Quebec
MONTREAL — An investigation into a climate of fear at a Montreal primary school has reignited a debate about secularism in Quebec’s education system, with the provincial government pledging to consider new measures to keep religion out of classrooms.
Quebec’s education minister says the province’s secularism law, known as Bill 21, was not being respected at the school and could be strengthened. His comments follow a report released earlier this month that found a group of teachers at Bedford school, many of North African descent, subjected children to physical and psychological violence.
The issue has dominated Quebec headlines this week, after the opposition Parti Québécois labelled it “a case of Islamist infiltration” into the public school system, with the Coalition Avenir Québec government quickly following suit.
But critics say the focus on religion is a red herring that distracts from the fact authorities let the situation at Bedford continue for years without taking action.