Objective coverage of church-state and religious liberty developments, with extensive links to primary sources.
Wednesday, January 03, 2007
French Tribunal Says Pig Soup Is Not Discriminatory
In France, an administrative tribunal has overturned a decision by Paris police who said that a soup kitchen for the poor discriminates against Muslims and Jews because it serves pork soup as its main fare. The soup kitchen, and others like it across France associated with the right-wing Bloc Identitaire, have operated since 2004. Last winter Fabienne Keller, the mayor of Strasbourg, said the soup kitchens (known as Solidarite des Francais (SDF)) should be banned as racist. SDF's website invited that charge, saying: "Attention, cheese, dessert, coffee, clothes, snacks go with the pig soup: no pig soup, no dessert - the only rule of our action: our own before the others." Pork soup is a traditional dish of rural France. Guardian Unlimited yesterday, however, reported that the administrative judge found the Paris soup kitchen had not actually refuse to serve Jews and Muslims, and so could not be found to have discriminated. The tribunal ordered the Paris police prefecture to pay 1000 Euros in costs to SDF. [Corrected]