Showing posts with label Rights of religious minorities. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rights of religious minorities. Show all posts

Friday, 18 May 2018

Indigenous religion not protected, ANU academic tells Ruddock review

by Andrew Brown
Sydney Morning Herald
6 April 2018 

A leading Canberra academic has told the Turnbull government's review into religious freedom that Aboriginals are not adequately protected to practice their religion.

Ernst Willheim, a visiting fellow at the Centre for International and Public Law at the Australian National University, said the current legal system failed to accommodate the difference between Aboriginal and "mainstream religions".

An ANU fellow has said the current legal system fails to accommodate differences between Indigenous religion and "mainstream religions".

The submission was one of more than 16,000 received by the review, headed up by former Attorney General Philip Ruddock, recently made public.

The inquiry was announced last year following concerns surrounding religious freedom after same-sex marriage was legalised.

The religious freedom review is being headed by former Howard government minister Philip Ruddock.

In his submission to the review, the expert on Aboriginal heritage protection said Indigenous Australians were not fully protected by the law to practice their religious beliefs.

"Aboriginal religious or spiritual beliefs commonly require that particular knowledge be restricted to certain individuals or groups and not to be further disclosed," Mr Willheim said.

"Yet the statutory procedures for obtaining protection ... require full disclosure of the details of secret knowledge or beliefs to non-Aboriginal decision makers and to the opponents of protection.

"Disclosure of secret knowledge or beliefs through a public inquiry process destroys the values Aboriginal people seek to protect."

The academic said current laws enacted to protected the religious beliefs of Aboriginals have failed to achieve their purpose.

Mr Willheim said there was a "collision" of the core values of Aboriginal religious practices and the Australian legal system.

"The Australian legal system establishes a non-Aboriginal process for the authentication of Aboriginal religious belief," he said. "That in itself is inherently offensive to Aboriginal people."

A key part of Mr Willheim's submission noted secrecy was an essential part of Aboriginal religious beliefs, with elders guarding knowledge and passing it on selectively to the next generation.

According to the ANU visiting fellow, Indigenous people would have to break these traditions if they were required in a legal setting.

"These beliefs, ceremonies and rituals form part of the religious life of the community. Access to religious knowledge is a basis for power in the community," he said.
"Aboriginal religions are fundamentally different from mainstream religions but the legal system fails to accommodate the difference.

"International law principles and international authorities clearly support the view that the rights of Indigenous people to pursue their religious, spiritual and cultural practices are important legal rights."

While 16,000 submissions were received by the review, almost 2000 were made public before the Easter weekend.

The rest of the submissions are due to be published on May 18, when the review is expected to hand down its report.

Sunday, 28 February 2016

The rights of religious minorities in predominantly Muslim majority communities : The Marrakesh Declaration

Recently, in order to examine more deeply what entails the rights of religious minorities in Muslim lands, both in theory and practice, His Highness, King Muhammad VI of Morocco, called a conference in Marrakesh in the Kingdom of Morocco.  The result of this conference is the Marrakesh Declaration.  It is a two page document which is embedded in this post and can be read here on line (there is a side-bar to scroll down) and/or it can be downloaded.  Could you please distribute this post widely among your networks.  There is so much going on in the world of a negative nature under the controversial heading "Islam" that sensible and peaceful actions can go unremarked and unnoticed. 

Readers may find this linked Wikipedia article of use in its discussion of historic attitudes and relationships between Islam and other religions.  For those not used to the ways of Wikipedia, please note that it is something of a democracy insofar as articles can be edited and re-edited by many contributors.

The Call to Action references the Charter of Medina. Ton find out more about the Charter or, as it is sometimes referred to,the Constitution of Medina, please go here.

Conference Aims

In order to examine more deeply what entails the rights of religious minorities in Muslim lands, both in theory and practice, His Highness, King Muhammad VI of Morocco, will host a conference in Marrakesh in the Kingdom of Morocco. The Ministry of Endowments and Islamic Affairs of the Kingdom of Morocco and the Forum for Promoting Peace in Muslim Societies, based in the U.A.E. will jointly organize the conference, scheduled to be held from 25th – 27th January, 2016 (15th – 17th Rabi al-Thani, 1437). A large number of ministers, muftis, religious scholars, and academics from various backgrounds and schools of thought will, God willing, participate in this conference. Representatives from various religions, including those pertinent to the discussion, from the Muslim world and beyond, as well as representatives from various international Islamic associations and organizations will be in attendance.

The conference’s discussions and research will focus on the following areas:
  1. Grounding the discussion surrounding religious minorities in Muslim lands in Sacred Law utilizing its general principles, objectives, and adjudicative methodology;
  2. exploring the historical dimensions and contexts related to the issue;
  3. and examining the impact of domestic and international rights.

This conference, with God’s help and providence, aims to begin the historic revival of the objectives and aims of the Charter of Medina, taking into account global and international treaties and utilizing enlightening, innovative case studies that are good examples of working towards pluralism. The conference also aims to contribute to the broader legal discourse surrounding contractual citizenship and the protection of minorities, to awaken the dynamism of Muslim societies and encourage the creation a broad-based movement of protecting religious minorities in Muslim lands