Objective coverage of church-state and religious liberty developments, with extensive links to primary sources.
Thursday, November 08, 2007
Recent Prisoner Free Exercise Cases
In Blount v. Jabe, 2007 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 81789 (WD VA, Nov. 5, 2007), a Virginia federal district court rejected plaintiff prisoner's First Amendment and RLUIPA claims alleging that on two different dates the rules for Common Fare diets were violated because the Common Fare meal contained fish and dairy products together. The court found no intentional conduct that deprived plaintiff of his rights. It also concluded that no substantial burden was placed on plaintiff's free exercise of religion.
In Wares v. Simmons, 2007 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 81351 (D KS, Oct. 31, 2007), a Kansas federal district court upheld prison restrictions on the property that a prisoner can possess after he was sanctioned for refusing to participate in a sexual abuse treatment program. Plaintiff challenged a rule that permitted him only to possess primary religious texts of his faith, and not other religious books. Considering the claim after a remand by the 10th Circuit, the court held that preventing a Jewish prisoner from possessing the "Tanya" and/or the "Tehillim" did not substantially burden his exercise of religion. Moreover the policy served legitimate penological interests and that plaintiff had the alternative of donating his books to the prison library and using them there.
In Hewitt v. Henderson, 2007 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 80812 (WD LA, Sept. 6, 2007), a Louisiana federal district court dismissed a prisoners free exercise and equal protection claims. Under extended lockdown rules, plaintiff was not released from work for Friday Muslim prayer. He was, however, permitted to pray in his cellblock. The court found no violation of the prisoner's constitutional rights.
In Tirone v. Trella, 2007 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 79812 (D NJ, Oct. 29, 2007), a New Jersey federal district court rejected a free exercise challenge to a jail's high security lockdown policy that prevented plaintiff from attending weekly Jumah prayer services.
Wednesday, November 07, 2007
2008 Religious Freedom Moot Court Problem Released
"In God We Trust" Posters Aproved For California School District Classrooms
White House Meeting With Israeli Religious Leaders Will Discuss Temple Mount
Sunni-Shiite Rivalries In New York Prisons
Oregon Supreme Court Hears Arguments In Circumcision Case
Pope Meets Saudi King-- Raises Issue of Christian Rights In Saudi Arabia
Senator Seeks Information On Financial Accountability From Six Tele-Evangelists
Updates on Election Results of Interest
Tuesday, November 06, 2007
Mississippi Gubernatorial Challenger Runs Evangelical-Laden Campaign
UPDATE: As expected, Gov. Haley Barbour was elected to a second term in Tuesday's contest. (Northeast Mississippi Daily Journal.)
Two Ballot Issues Around Nation Impact Church-State Concerns
In Utah, voters are casting ballots on a school voucher program that includes vouchers that can be used in private religious schools-- so long as the school enrolls at least 40 students. Yesterday's Salt Lake Tribune carries a Q&A on the proposal. Vouchers of $500 per student would be available regardless of family income, with vouchers of up to $3000 per student for lower income families. The voucher program was passed by the legislature in February (see prior posting), but opponents gathered enough signatures to force this referendum on the law.
UPDATE: Berkley, Michigan's proposed charter amendment to require display of a nativity scene on city property was defeated 55%- 45% in Tuesday's election. (Detroit Free Press.) Also on Tuesday, Utah's voucher program was defeated by a substantial majority. With most of the precincts in, over 60% of voters had voted to kill the voucher law. (Salt Lake Tribune.)
Rise of Independent Congregations Explains Rising Church Litigation
Columnist Says Anti-Semitism On Rise In Britain
Every synagogue service and Jewish communal event now requires guards on the lookout for violence from both neo-Nazis and Muslim extremists. Orthodox Jews have become particular targets; some have begun wearing baseball caps instead of skullcaps and concealing their Star of David jewelry....
[A]nti-Semitism has also become respectable in mainstream British society.... At the heart of this ugly development is a new variety of anti-Semitism, aimed primarily not at the Jewish religion, and not at a purported Jewish race, but at the Jewish state. Zionism is now a dirty word in Britain, and opposition to Israel has become a fig leaf for a resurgence of the oldest hatred.
Pre-Trial Hearing Held In Charges Against Anti-Gay Funeral Protesters
US Agency Wants To Talk With Nigerian Leader About Religious Freedom
Monday, November 05, 2007
Blogger Questions Verdict Against Westboro Funeral Picketers
UPDATE: Another analysis of the legal issues in the case appears today in an article by Michael C. Dorf on Findlaw. [Thanks to How Appealing for the lead.]
Zoning Issue Posed By "Theater Church"
Plans For London Mosque Draw Opposition
Egyptian Court Acquits Christians Charged With Defaming Islam
Recently Available Articles on Law and Religion
- R. Randall Kelso, Custom and Tradition Versus Reason in Modern Secular and Religious Moral Reasoning and in Modern Constitutional Law, (August 2007).
- Christina T. Trotta, From God to Gab: Analyzing the First Amendment Rights of Religious Student Groups in an Age of Free Speech and Political Correctness, (February 16, 2007).
- Mary Jean Dolan, Government-Sponsored Chaplains and Crisis: Walking the Fine Line in Disaster Response and Daily Life, (Hastings Constitutional Law Quarterly, Vol. 35, No. 3, 2008).
- Alan Weinstein, Avoiding a RLUIPA Claim, (Cleveland-Marshall Legal Studies Paper No. 07-150, Oct. 24, 2007).
- Patrick McKinley Brennan, Locating Authority in Law, and Avoiding the Authoritarianism of 'Textualism', (Villanova University School of Law Working Paper Series, No. 86, Oct. 2007. Forthcoming, Notre Dame Law Review.)
- 13th Annual International Law and Religion Symposium. The 1981 U.N. Declaration on Religious Tolerance and Non-discrimination: Implementing Its Principles after Twenty-five Years, 2007 Brigham Young University Law Review 575-812 (2007). Articles by: Jose Maria Contreras Mazario, Carolyn Evans, Shavarsh Khachatryan, Christopher Marsh, Daniel P. Payne, Raul Gonzalez Schmal, Robert A. Seiple, Eiichiro Takahata, Khatuna Tsintsadze, Carlos Valderrama Adriansen and Ilhan Yildiz.
Belgians Bring Fraud Charges Against Church of Scientology
Court Refuses Summary Judgment In Religious Leafleting Case
Sunday, November 04, 2007
Minnesota High Court Reverses Clergy Sexual Conduct Conviction In Split Decision
The clergy sexual conduct statute makes it a crime for a member of the clergy to engage in sexual penetration with a person who is seeking or receiving “religious or spiritual advice, aid, or comfort in private.” Bussmann argues that the clergy sexual conduct statute is unconstitutional because it is void for vagueness and it violates the Establishment Clause of the United States and Minnesota Constitutions. Because we (1) conclude that the clergy sexual conduct statute is not void for vagueness; (2) are equally divided on whether the statute facially violates the Establishment Clause; but (3) conclude that Bussmann’s conviction, based on the admission of extensive evidence concerning religious doctrine and church policies and practices, violated the Establishment Clause, we affirm the court of appeals’ decision on the first two issues, reverse the court of appeals’ decision on the third issue, and remand for a new trial.The judges who concluded that the statute was facially inconsistent with the Establishment Clause argued that its provisions: "are not secular and neutral, but instead incorporate religious doctrine, as reflected in the legislative determinations that the clergy member is always in a position of power over an advisee, that any sexual penetration with an advisee is always causally related to the religious and spiritual advice given by the clergy member to an advisee, and that an advisee always lacks capacity to effectively consent to that sexual penetration."
3rd Circuit Overturns Religious Tax Protesters' Convictions
In United States v. McKee, (3d Cir., Oct. 29, 2007), the court upheld the defendants' conviction for conspiracy to defraud the United States, but reversed their convictions for employment tax evasion on the ground that the jury instructions constructively amended the indictment. The court, though, did not order an acquittal on these charges, finding that there was sufficient evidence to convict on the amended charges. Finally the court ordered acquittal of one of the defendants on charges of failure to file individual income tax returns because the evidence was insufficient to establish guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.
Peter Goldberger who represented two of the defendants criticized the appellate court for failing to reach the religious freedom issues involved, saying "It's a threat to every established pacifist religion that has had kind of an unwritten understanding with the IRS." One of the defendants has by now already completed her sentence, and two others have been moved to halfway houses and home confinement. However all three had been ordered by the trial court to file delinquent tax forms and pay back taxes as a condition of their release from prison, something to which they still object. They did pay the fines and penalties imposed on them, and technically they are now due a refund because of the reversal of many of their convictions. [Thanks to Jack E. Shattuck for the lead.]
Kentucky Governor Asks Court To Clarify 10 Commandments Ban
UPDATE: On Monday, a day before the gubernatorial election, a Kentucky federal district court ruled that the earlier orders enjoining the placing of a large 10 Commandments Monument outside the Kentucky Capitol did not apply to the Foundations of American Law display. However the court did not rule on the constitutionality of the Foundations display. Within hours the Foundations display was put up in the Capitol Rotunda and Gov. Fletcher issued an executive order calling for it to remain until a later court ruling is issued. (Louisville Courrier-Journal, Nov. 6.) Meanwhile, AP reported on Wednesday that former state AG Steve Beshear defeated Fletcher in the gubernatorial race. In the campaign, Beshear touted his religious upbringing and ran TV ads with him in front of a church.
Court Enjoins Georgia City's Parade and Demonstration Ordinance
Finland Charges Sex Discrimination In Dispute Over Female Clergy
Quebec Schools Will Begin Mandatory Ethics and Religious Culture Courses
Saturday, November 03, 2007
Optional Flag-Folding Ceremonies Are Now Back In Military Funerals
A family may request the recitation of words to accompany the meaningful presentation of the American flag as we honor the dedication and sacrifice of their loved ones.... Volunteer honor guards are authorized to read the so-called "13-fold" flag recitation or any comparable script. Survivors of the deceased need to provide material and request it be read by the volunteer honor guards... Volunteer honor guards will accept requests for recitations that reflect any or no religious traditions, on an equal basis.In a speech to the American Legion on Thursday (full text), Vice President Dick Cheney referred to the clarification:
As most of you know, our nation has 125 national cemeteries operated by the VA. Burials conducted in those cemeteries should honor the wishes of the families, including those that relate to religious observances. And despite the confusing order that recently came out of the federal bureaucracy, I want you to know that honor guards at military funerals will give the 13-fold recitation at any service where the family requests it.Today's Christian Post reports that conservative Christian groups such as the American Center for Law and Justice are still unhappy because the policy now permits only volunteer honor guards, and not officials such as military chaplains, to read the recitation. Also families will no longer receive the flyer informing them of optional flag-folding ceremony. However a posting today on the ACLJ's website says it is pleased with the resolution of the matter as announced by Vice-President Cheney.
New Challenge To "Under God" In Pledge Filed By Newdow As Attorney
Court Stays Injunction Pending Appeal of Religious Displays In Postal Outlet
Ireland's Drunk-Driving Proposals Create Problem For Catholic Churches
National Park Service Sued Over Mt. Rushmore Speech Permit Rules
British Appeals Panel Rejects Religious Discrimination Claim of Magistrate
The Appellate Tribunal said that the denial of McClintock's request did not amount to direct discrimination because he did not make clear to the Department of Constitutional Affairs (DCA) that he had any religious or philosophical objections to adoptions by same-sex couples, only that it was an unacceptable social experiment. That also led to the rejection of McClintock's indirect discrimination claim that others holding religious or philosophical objections to gay adoption would be disadvantaged by the DCA ruling. Finally the EAT concluded that magistrates must apply the law of the land as their oath requires, and cannot opt out of cases on moral grounds.
Inspire Magazine reports on the EAT's decision.
Friday, November 02, 2007
DoJ Says RFRA May Trump Anti-Bias Rules For Faith-Based Grantees
More Legal Charges Pending Against Westboro Anti-Gay Funeral Picketer
However, Phelps-Roper's legal battles are not over. She is to appear in a Sarpy County (NE) Court on Monday on charges of flag mutilation, negligent child abuse, contributing to the delinquency of a minor and disturbing the peace, all growing out of a funeral protest in Bellevue, Nebraska at which Phelps-Roper allowed her 10-year-old son to stand on an American flag as part of the protest.
Israeli Court In Middle of Greek Orthodox Church Dispute
Former Patriarch Irineos I was dismissed two years ago after a scandal involving sale of church lands to Jewish groups. Patriarch Theopilus III was appointed to succeed him, but Irineos continued to live in Jerusalem's Greek Orthodox compound. So Theopilus asked an Israeli civil court to order Irineos to turn over millions of dollars worth of church icons that normally pass from one Patriarch to the next. The Israeli judge placed a temporary seizure on the items to prevent Irineos from transferring them to anyone else. The judge also instructed Hershimandit Kelidion, the judge of the Greek Orthodox religious court, to enter Irineos' residence to photograph the disputed items. When Kelidion arrived, accompanied by police, a scuffle broke out with police guarding Irineos who refused Kelidion entry. The matter remains unresolved.
Unlicensed Midwife Cannot Raise Religious Claims of Non-Party Amish
Economist Publishes Special Report on Religion and Politics
For politicians doomed to deal with religion, two lessons stand out—one principled, the other pragmatic. The principle is that church and state are best kept separate. Subsidised religion has seldom made sense for either state or church: witness Europe's empty pews....
The pragmatic lesson concerns those wars of religion. Partly because of their obsession with keeping church and state separate, Western powers (and religious leaders) have been too reluctant to look for faith-driven solutions to religious conflicts.
The magazine then features a series of articles under the caption Special Report on Religion and Public Life. Here are links to the separate portions of the Report: In God's name ; O come all ye faithful ; The power of private prayer ; The new wars of religion ; Holy depressing ; Bridging the divide ; Back to the Ottomans ; Stop in the name... ; The lesson from America .
Israeli Court Says Assassain Can Attend Son's Circumcision To Be Held In Prison
Amir's son was conceived during conjugal visits with his wife, who he married in a proxy ceremony in 2004. The circumcision ceremony-- which takes place on the eighth day of a boy's life-- will coincide with the anniversary on the Gregorian calendar of Amir's 1995 shooting of then Prime-Minister Rabin.
Illinois Mayor Pushes Anti-Crime Prayer Initiative
Scientology Gets Official Recognition In Spain
Thursday, November 01, 2007
Federal Earmarks For Religious Organizations On the Rise
Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood Platform Urges Implementation of Islamic Law
Bangladesh May Ban "Religion-Based Politics"
Cert. Filed In Massachusetts Church Closing Case
Indian Supreme Court Orders Registration of All Religious Marriages
Anti-Gay Funeral Picketers Ordered To Pay $10.9 Milliion In Damages
Churches Pledge Defiance As Oklahoma's New Immigration Law Takes Effect
Wednesday, October 31, 2007
7th Circuit Holds Taxpayers Lack Standing To Challenge Indiana Legislative Prayer
Covering yesterday's decision, the Indianapolis Star quotes ACLU attorney Ken Falk. He says if the legislature resumes sectarian prayer, his group would be willing to file suit on behalf of a person who would likely have standing-- someone who regularly attends legislative sessions and must listen to the prayers.
Meanwhile the American Jewish Committee issued a release saying that yesterday's decision "is extremely alarming because it denies taxpayers the right to challenge a legislative act that in practice gives preferential access to Christian clergy in determining who shall present a daily legislative prayer." Indiana Attorney General Steve Carter released a statement in support of the decision, saying: "Legislative prayer is a worthy act that I think the State should protect within relevant legal precedents."
Numerous prior postings on the case can be accessed at this link. Links to a recording of the Sept. 2006 oral arguments before the 7th Circuit , and to the earlier opinion staying the lower court's injunction pending appeal, are also available online.
Buddhist Chapel Added At Air Force Academy
Virginia Case Raises Question of Private Enforcement of Charitable Trust Terms
Murders For Witchcraft Use of Body Parts On Rise In South Africa
7th Circuit Rules For Baptist Church In RLUIPA Zoning Case
The Court of Appeals rejected two rather elaborate theories used by the district judge to deny relief to the church. The lower court said that since a religious use includes not only religious services, but also residential uses such as a rectory for the minister, churches would get preferential treatment if they were not required to obtain a variance. Second it said that a church could interfere with existing businesses because state law prohibits the sale of liquor or pornography within specified distances from any church. Judge Posner wrote: "Government cannot, by granting churches special privileges (the right of a church official to reside in a building in a nonresidential district, or the right of the church to be free from offensive land uses in its vicinity), furnish the premise for excluding churches from otherwise suitable districts."
Saudi King Urges British Muslims Toward Moderation
New Poll Shows Voters Oppose Candidates Using Religion To Influence Election
Article Explores Accommodation of Religious Anti-Gay Workplace Expression
Tuesday, October 30, 2007
Supreme Court Hears Arguments In Prisoner's Tort Claims Act Case
As Halloween Approaches, Paper Recounts 17th Century Witch Trials
Canadian Prime Minister Meets With Dalai Lama For First Time
Recent Prisoner Religious Exercise Cases In U.S. and Britain
Singh v. Goord, 2007 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 78742 (SDNY, Oct. 9, 2007), involved a challenge by a Sikh prisoner to various policies of the new York Department of Corrections, attempting to obtain greater accommodation of a number of Sikh religious practices. Some of the claims were dismissed for failure to exhaust administrative remedies. However, the court permitted plaintiff to move ahead on his claim that he should be permitted to wear the kara (steel bracelet) and khanda (pendant), possess a second kanga (religious comb), possess longer turbans, remain in contact with religious articles during searches, and that prison religious exercise policies should be re-written to include Sikhs. It granted plaintiff summary judgment on separate packing and storage of his scriptures. It granted defendants summary judgment allowing them to require plaintiff to pray quietly instead of out loud, upholding the vegetarian diet plaintiff is now served, and permitting the identity card maintained by prison authorities.
In Britain, Muslim prisoners at a high security facility in Leeds are suing for $20 million in damages because of a mistake in the Ramadan menu. CFP yesterday reported that the menu offered ham sandwiches as one of the options. Ministry of Justice officials say it was merely a printing mistake, but some inmates claim they actually received ham sandwiches when they ordered cheese sandwiches, and that some were so hungry that they ate the religiously forbidden ham.
Israeli Rabbinate Threatens To Fine Zionist Rabbinical Group
Italian Church Groups Evicting Tenants To Get Higher Rents
TRO Against Anti-Muslim Group Extended
Monday, October 29, 2007
Military Funeral Flag Script Dropped After Objection To Jewish References
The script accompanying the 12th fold also mentions religion: "The twelfth fold, in the eyes of a Christian citizen, represents an emblem of eternity and glorifies, in their eyes, God the Father, the Son, and Holy Ghost." Last July, the Air Force secularized the script used at its funerals. (See prior posting.) [Thanks to Scott Mange for the lead.]
Breakaway Presbyterians In Ohio Keep Church Property
UPDATE: Here is the full text of the magistrate's opinion in Hudson Presbyterian Church v. Eastminster Presbytery, (OH Com. Pl., Summit Co., Oct. 23, 2007). [Thanks to Ed Koster for sending along the opinion.]
UPDATE: The Christian Post on Monday reports on the fourth annual Convocation of the New Wineskins Association of Churches beig held this week. It will create a non-geographical Transitional Presbytery for the increasing number of congregations leaving the PCUSA to seek New Wineskins membership.
Prisoner Claim Raises Holiday Decoration Issue In New Context
Some Wisconsin Amish Object To Obtaining Building Permits
Recent Articles of Interest
- Martha Jane Bailey, Beverley Baines & Bita Amani, Expanding Recognition of Foreign Polygamous Marriages: Policy Implications for Canada, (Queen's Univ. Legal Studies Research Paper No. 07-12, 2006).
- Muriel Morisey, Flag Desecration, Religion and Patriotism, (Rutgers Journal of Law and Religion, Vol. 9, 2007).
- Robert A. Sedler, Essay: The Protection of Religious Freedom under the American Constitution, (Wayne State University Law School Research Paper No. 07-37).
- Benjamin Straumann, The Peace of Westphalia (1648) as a Secular Constitution, (September 2007).
Other:
- Journal of Church and State , Vol 49, No. 3 (Summer 2007) has recently been published.
Sunday, October 28, 2007
Roots of Spain's Church-State Tensions Go Back to Spanish Civil War
Meanwhile, in another move that heightens tensions, USA Today reports that the Vatican has beatified 498 victims of the anti-Catholic persecution that began in 1931 and became an excuse for Nationalists to launch a rebellion that ultimately placed Franco in power. This declaration of martyrdom comes just three days before Spain's Parliament is to enact a Socialist-sponsored law that will condemn Franco and call for the removal of tributes to him around the country. (See prior posting.) The ceremony today in St. Peter's Square in Rome is the largest mass beatification ceremony the Church has ever held.
Catholic Bishops Debating Draft Of Election Year Guide
Canadian Bill Would Require Muslim Women To Uncover Face Before Voting
Kansas Supreme Court Temporarily Halts Grand Jury Probing Abortion Provider
No Free Exercise Issue In Church's Flea Market Restrictions
UN Religious Freedom Official Worries About Abuse of Religious Power
In an Oct. 25 speech to the NGO, Committee for Freedom of Religion or Belief, she warned against countries going too far in banning defamation against religion. According to the Adventist News Network, Jahangir argued that "objective criticism" of religion is a human right, and expressed concern that blasphemy laws can be used to silence dissent. She also rejected analogies between racial hatred and religious hatred, saying: "religion is unlike race -- you cannot proselytize to change [your] race. There are serious differences."
Speaking on Oct. 26 before the General Assembly’s Social, Humanitarian and Cultural (Third) Committee, Jahangir warned against the use of religion as an excuse for criminal action that encroaches on the rights of others. A UN News Centre release quotes her: "No impunity should be awarded when criminal acts which infringe on the human rights of others are given a religious label. At the same time, all governmental actions should be proportionate, abide by the rule of law and respect the applicable international human rights standards."
NYT Article Focuses On Splits In Evangelical Movement
For the conservative Christian leadership, what is most worrisome about the evangelical disappointment with President Bush is that it coincides with a widening philosophical rift. Ever since they broke with the mainline Protestant churches nearly 100 years ago, the hallmark of evangelicals theology has been a vision of modern society as a sinking ship, sliding toward depravity and sin. For evangelicals, the altar call was the only life raft — a chance to accept Jesus Christ, rebirth and salvation. Falwell, Dobson and their generation saw their political activism as essentially defensive, fighting to keep traditional moral codes in place so their children could have a chance at the raft.
But many younger evangelicals — and some old-timers — take a less fatalistic view. For them, the born-again experience of accepting Jesus is just the beginning. What follows is a long-term process of “spiritual formation” that involves applying his teachings in the here and now. They do not see society as a moribund vessel. They talk more about a biblical imperative to fix up the ship by contributing to the betterment of their communities and the world. They support traditional charities but also public policies that address health care, race, poverty and the environment.
Employment Discrimination Suit Filed Against New York Synagogue
Saturday, October 27, 2007
6th Circuit Says Christian High Schoolers Can Cahllenge Anti-Harassment Code
In a 2-1 decision, the majority held that “an allegation of a past chill of First Amendment-protected activity is sufficient to confer standing to a plaintiff seeking retrospective relief, even when that relief comes in the form of nominal damages…. [T]o establish such a claim, a plaintiff must show that the defendant’s actions or policy would deter a person of ordinary firmness from exercising his or her First Amendment liberties in the way that the plaintiff alleges he or she would have, were it not for the defendant’s conduct or policy.”
Judge Cook, dissenting, said: "'This is a case about nothing.' The majority burdens a federal district judge with a full-blown trial to determine whether to award the plaintiff a single dollar if a policy no longer in effect was unconstitutional despite never being enforced against the plaintiff.”
The appeal brought together unusual allies. Both the ACLU and the Alliance Defense Fund praised the 6th Circuit’s result. The AP reported on the decision. (See prior related posting.)
Suit Challenges Illinois' Moment-of-Silence Law
UPDATE: On Monday, according to the AP, Illinois U.S. District Judge Robert Gettleman refused to issue a temporary restraining order to prevent District 214 and Buffalo Grove High School from holding a moment of silence, after school officials agreed they would not mention religion in carrying out the law. However the court permitted the suit challenging the law to move ahead and scheduled another hearing for next month. The judge suggested that Sherman drop the Governor as defendant and replace him with the state board of education.
Friday, October 26, 2007
County To Provide Tax Exempt Financing For Parochial School Construction
British Prime Minister Announces Plans To Create Constitution and Bill of Rights
First, I trace the historical roots of liberty in Britain to a struggle for tolerance, by which I mean also a gradual acceptance of pluralism - a notion of political liberty that would allow those of different denominations and beliefs to coexist peacefully together.... This did not happen all at once, or without setbacks and struggle. The flames of religious intolerance burned across this land too. But never as strongly as in continental Europe....
[W]e should neither glorify nor distort what has gone before - and the struggles, both the ups and downs, of empire are not long behind us - to uphold a particular view of where we are now or what we can become. So we need to recognise, for example, that it took until 1829 for Catholic emancipation, even later for legislation ending discrimination against the Jewish community..... But the single most powerful thread that runs though our history is a succession of chapters in the defence of liberty and toleration. We gave refuge to Huguenots fleeing persecution in the 1600s. By the eighteenth century, London was arguably already the world's most diverse city - a situation which we can remain proud of in Britain to this day.