chickenfeet (
chickenfeet) wrote2006-10-11 03:20 pm
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Why is religious belief privileged?
I find the debates over the wearing of veils interesting. Generally speaking I think that if someone wants to wear a veil they should. Not because it's part of their religion but because I can't think of a good reason why they shouldn't. I note though that the debate is couched almost entirely in religious terms. That prompts me to ask the question why religious beliefs should be held to justify behaviour that would be be banned or discouraged if indulged in because of other beliefs, however deeply held. For example, why should a committed nudist not be permitted to meet Mr. Jack Straw or attend a lecture at Imperial College in a state of undress? They certainly couldn't be held to be a security risk! It might be argued that nudity offends some people but that, of course, is precisely the argument used against veils.
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(just reporting, like. I have not formulated a view of this all yet)
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If a male politician were to say that masking one's face with make-up—which, after all, disguises many facial nuances—discourages honest and straightforward community dialogue, we'd all think it was pretty odd.
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http://cmiskp.echr.coe.int/tkp197/viewhbkm.asp?skin=hudoc-en&action=html&table=1132746FF1FE2A468ACCBCD1763D4D8149&key=11423
(That should work, the ECtHR searchable database is incredibly irritating about providing stable sensible permanent links). Some interesting points, particularly in the dissent at the end.
"Religious freedom" is singled out in the EConv.HR and, if I recollect correctly, the Universal Declaration (and various constitutions and the like). The question is, what is "religion" or religious belief for these purposes: in the Turkish case it was observed that the right has been of use to atheists.
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OK, that's a bit overstated. Blame it on one too many discussions about the veil that take all of three seconds to degenerate into bitching about how Muslims don't 'let' 'their women' wear normal clothes and date outside their race and and and... it's enough to make a person want a headscarf. For wearing or for throttling, either.
More on topic, we do put 'freedom of conscience' into a higher category than 'because I feel like it', and I think we have to. And as long as a significant number of people are religious, that's going to get in there.
(And of course, also because it's a time-honoured convenient compromise that allows the law to exempt some people from some laws some of the time rather than either face endless small revolts (and these days lawsuits) and still, for example, stop the rest of us avoiding taxes by claiming we've taken a vow of poverty.
You're right, it's kind of nuts, but I don't see a simple alternative as long as we're descended from a legal system that privileged one religion by default because 'everyone was religious'. Either everyone gets it or nobody does, and it's so entrenched that I can't even begin to imagine the mess there...
I wonder if Straw has trouble telling nuns apart?
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"The Mother Superior Doesn't Go In For That Sort Of Thing..."
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I have mixed feelings about veiling. Because I know that veiling is not a particularly Muslim requirement, but rather a cultural one that has been inculcated into Islam*, I can see situations where a veiled woman might be required to remove all or part of the veil. But if that is to happen, I think it should be done as sensitively as possible, in ways to minimize the woman's sense of her privacy being infringed upon.
OTOH, Since I know that most cultures that practice veiling historically range from the merely patriarchal to the blatantly misogynistic, I can't understand why women living in Western countries should continue to wear the veil. I should also mention that Islam has strictures for men's modesty, as well -- it's just that regular men's clothing, provided the collars are high, and sleeves and legs long, meets those guidelines.
*Veiling goes back to the ancient Near East And Mediterranean. Almost every culture from Mesopotamia to Imperial Rome had some kind of veiling practice. Orthodox Jewish women still veil -- in the sense that they cover their hair (sometimes with a wig, so it's not noticeable), and I know plenty of women who still cover their heads when going to church.
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(does that even scan?)
I really don't understand, in the deepest of my head, the whole religion and faith thing. I just don't get it. I'll be astounded that seeds grow into plants, and that the sun keeps rising, and that I exist, but that's about the limit of my spirituality. I'd love to be able to believe in some sort of life-after-death, and I'd be a more content person if I did, but I can't.
I don't think it's that I have more respect for people who do believe in more than the mere birth, copulation, and death, exactly. But they believe in something I can't, and me attempting to shout down their beliefs, or belittle them, is wrong, because I'm never going to understand what I'm shouting against.
In return I'd like the freedom to not believe in things and live by my own ethics, and I've chosen to live somewhere that I have that.
Huge disclaimer: obv, there are limits to religious reasoning being given the ok by me - killing, hurting, abusing, or coercing people are the obvious ones, but there surely are more.
Smaller disclaimer: I reserve the right to be more critical of catholic (and possibly other christian) beliefs, simply because I have first-hand experience of those creatures and they wrong they can do).
An aside: this whole veiling thing stinks of fear of the 'other', and ignorance about why women might choose veiling. It's not about religion at all.
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