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Quebec takes bold action as Muslim activists blur line between public prayer and protest
Late last month, Quebec Premier Franois Legault and Secularism Minister Jean-Franois Robergeannounced that they will introduce a new law this fall to ban prayer in public spaces. The measure comes in response to what Roberge described as the "proliferation of street prayer" a practice that has become synonymous with mass Islamist displays, particularly in the wake of pro-Hamas and pro-Palestinian demonstrations.Street prayer is no longer the image of quiet devotion. FromToronto toTimes Square, it is political theater, often conducted en masse, blocking roads, obstructing entrances and projecting intimidation into the heart of civic life.ISRAELI MINISTER WARNS CANADA IS 'MARCHING TOWARD THE ABYSS' AFTER JEWISH MAN ATTACKED IN FRONT OF CHILDRENLegault was blunt: "When you want to pray, you go in a church or a mosque not in a public place." Roberge added that such practices generate unease, erode neutrality and risk public order.The echoes ofBill 21, Quebecs 2019 law banning public-sector workers from wearing religious symbols, are impossible to ignore. That earlier law asserted Quebecs right to defend lacit or secularism, in French with teeth. Now the province is extending the same logic to the streets.Predictably, civil liberties organizations and establishment Muslim leaders have raised alarms. Based in Toronto, the Canadian Civil Liberties Associationresponded to the plans with a statement that a ban on public prayer collides head-on with protections of religion, expression and assembly in Canadas Charter, a part of the countrys constitution. The Canadian Muslim Forumlabeled the proposed law stigmatizing. And Montreal Archbishop Christian Lpine went so far as toclaim that banning public prayer would be "like forbidding thought itself."The rhetoric is heavy, but it misses the core issue: Public prayer in this context is not an act of private conscience. It is a performance of power in shared civic space.To say so is not "Islamophobic." It is Islamic. The Prophet Muhammad himself cautioned against praying in the middle of the road. One hadith, or saying of the prophet, in Sunan Ibn Majah records: "Beware of stopping to rest and praying in the middle of the road, for it is the refuge of snakes and carnivorous animals."Beyond metaphor, the point is clear: Prayer must not endanger others or disrupt public order. Even Islamic law recognizes the folly of obstructing communal life with ritual performance. Quebec, in other words, is not contradicting Islam but upholding a principle embedded within it.This is not the first time Islamists have sought to stretch the limits of accommodation. Public prayer in Western cities has increasingly been used as a form of political demonstration. It is no coincidence that these displays often coincide with "Free Palestine" rallies that slide easily into antisemitic chants and intimidation of Jewish communities. Outside synagogues and churches, on sidewalks and in squares, mass prayer becomes less about God and more about leverage about showing who can claim the public square.Voices within Muslim communities warn against this manipulation. Raheel Raza, a Canadian Muslim journalist and the cofounder of theClarity Coalition, a network of Muslims, ex-Muslims and allies, challenging Islamist extremism, told me that she opposes religious practices imposed into civic life, from gender-segregated prayers in schools to Islamist infiltration of politics and street prayer.Her argument is simple: faith is personal, not a tool for public coercion.Similarly, Canadian Muslim commentator Mohammed Rizwan, a member of the Clarity Coalition, condemns the politicization of prayer in public spaces, calling it "a deliberate act to provoke and divide."Their perspectives matter precisely because they refuse the false binary that criticism of Islamism is an attack on Islam It is the opposite: a defence of faith against those who weaponize it.They also belie the reductionist allegation that all Muslims are Islamists in hiding.The constitutional battle to come is inevitable. The Supreme Courts2015 decision in Mouvement laque qubcois v. Saguenay established that even municipal prayers violate the states duty of neutrality. Quebec is not forging a new path. It is following a jurisprudence that insists public institutions cannot privilege religious expression.And, as with Bill 21, the government may well invoke the notwithstanding clause to shield this new law from Charter challenges. Critics will cry authoritarianism, but the real authoritarianism lies in the Islamists who claim the right to seize public streets for political theater under the guise of prayer.CLICK HERE FOR MORE FOX NEWS OPINIONWhat is at stake here is more than legal balance. It is the cultural coherence of Quebecs civic life and the civic life of communities from New York City to London.Public spaces are the commons where neutrality must prevail. To surrender them to religious or ideological spectacle is to surrender the very idea of a shared civic realm. Secularism is not intolerance. It is the only principle that guarantees equal freedom for all, regardless of creed.Quebecs proposal, then, is not a ban on prayer. It is a defense of the public square. Prayer belongs in mosques, churches, synagogues and homes. The streets belong to everyone. In refusing to conflate religious devotion with political intimidation, Quebec is asserting a truth that is both secular and, paradoxically, Islamic: worship that obstructs and divides has no place in the civic realm.This legislation will be polarizing. It will be challenged. But it will also draw a line a line that says Canada, Quebec in particular, and, dare say, one day, the world, will not be cowed into letting Islamist street politics redefine our public life.Lacit is not just an idea. It is a shield. And Quebec is once again prepared to use it.
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