jme 2006 - 8 - gates (religion et citizenship)
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Religion as cuckoo or crucible: beliefsand believing as vital for citizenshipand citizenship educationBrian E. Gates aa St Martin's College, UK
Version of record first published: 28 Nov 2006.
To cite this article: Brian E. Gates (2006): Religion as cuckoo or crucible: beliefs and believing asvital for citizenship and citizenship education, Journal of Moral Education, 35:4, 571-594
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Religion as cuckoo or crucible: beliefs
and believing as vital for citizenship
and citizenship education
Brian E. Gates*
St Martin’s College, UK
The importance of motivational beliefs and, more specifically, religion, is identified as central for
both citizenship and citizenship education. Whether they take an expressly religious form, or
appear in a purportedly more open form, such as faith or world view, beliefs are at the core of
human being. The tendency to speak more of shared values than beliefs in the context of educating
citizens is open to question – values are not necessarily any more universally agreed, since they too
are affected by beliefs. Moreover, the presumption of secularisation, that religious believing is fast
disappearing, is itself now exposed as strangely dated. Beliefs, often explicitly religious beliefs, are
fundamental in national constitutions. Thus, religion may inspire a critique of a nation’s
behaviour; religion will also need to be subject to critique. How to build an opportunity for
understanding and critiquing beliefs into any public educational system is a major challenge. The
provision for Religious Education (RE) in England is taken as an example of this challenge being
directly addressed as a necessary complement to any separate policy for character education,
citizenship education and/or moral education in whatever form they exist. RE is able to home in on
the religious plurality which figures in national and international life. Understanding of the insights
and contentions of religions in all their plurality is a source of illumination for citizens wherever
they are in the world
Being a citizen has an outward face, but an interior animation. Like those of an
automobile its visible appearance and performance will be what is commonly noticed
and measured, but what is under its bonnet or hood will be its major determinant.
This article will argue that the qualities of what is seen as citizenship and citizenship
education are significantly impeded unless special attention is paid to the more
interior motivational beliefs from which they derive real potency. This must include
a readiness to scrutinise religion and to be scrutinised by it, for religion is the engine
of belief. And yet in practice, the dimension of belief, as most especially constituted
in religious form, is widely neglected. This is true of English educators and their
counterparts in other western liberal settings in the discourse of both citizenship and
citizenship education. What strangely monochrome and peaceable world are they
*Division of Religion & Philosophy, St Martin’s College, Lancaster, LA1 3JD, UK. Email:
Journal of Moral Education
Vol. 35, No. 4, December 2006, pp. 571–594
ISSN 0305-7240 (print)/ISSN 1465-3877 (online)/06/040571-24
# 2006 Journal of Moral Education Ltd
DOI: 10.1080/03057240601025677
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living in? It has been exposed by global events to be a blind spot that warrants urgent
attention.
Beliefs – and values – in the arena of citizenship
What it means to be a citizen can vary according to how belonging is understood
from one nation state to another. The very notion of nation state, with high intensity
administrative order, has itself evolved into global usage relatively recently (Giddens,
1987). Yet the clustering of peoples into distinctive groups based on language,
culture, territory and shared beliefs goes back several thousand years. Some are
‘political nations’ wherein nationality derives from country of birth (ius soli), others
are ethnic nations with membership through parental inheritance (ius sanguinis)
(Krejci, 2004). And whether described as tribe or clan, nation or empire, the
language of religion has invariably been involved in the history of their social
ordering (Toynbee, 1976), and, in turn, carried over into assumptions as to what is
expected of one who ‘belongs’, as also of those defined as ‘outsiders’ (Marshall &
Williams, 1982).
These expectations are invariably set within a working framework of beliefs and
values which give the nation a distinctive identity, and which form the basis of its
constitution. Moreover, the forms through which national identity is appropriated
and expressed are often as much emotional as they are conceptually elaborated. This
applies within all of the current 193 independent nation states, each with its own
flag, symbolising loyalty to a greater entity, in reference to which individuals can feel
and know a sense of collective belonging (Nations Online http://www.nationsonline.
org/oneworld). It is no surprise therefore that the chants, songs and anthems heard
at both national and international sporting events reveal religious sentiments
mingling within the beliefs and values of the spectators wherever they are. Similarly,
the gestures and prayers of individual athletes reveal the intensity of conviction
which commonly motivates their performance.
Leaving aside the notion of the sporting citizen, citizenship has many other social
and political spheres of operation. These include employment, law and order1,
health and welfare, family obligation, media communications, electoral representa-
tion and the environment. They comprise both explicit and implicit expressions of
citizenship, since revenue from public taxation is as necessary for the function of the
nation state as the bloodstream to the human body, yet no less taken for granted.
The scope of Citizenship Education needs therefore to be enlarged to give attention
to the more implicit expressions as well as those which are supposedly more actively
participatory. In each of these spheres, the act of believing, as well as valuing, on the
part of individuals is involved, with such issues as: why work?; on what basis are
different modes of employment viewed as more or less important?; why bother at all
with society?; what claims, if any, do the dead have over the living?
Where the prevailing social context is sensed as grossly unfair, perhaps because of
inequalities in wealth and resource allocation that lead to premature death,
individuals and groups may challenge their national government by engaging in
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acts of resistance which may be non-violent or violent in form. These actions will be
based on beliefs and values.
These same beliefs may in some settings take on extreme forms, wherein the
enemy becomes demonised and all manner of aggression and retribution is given
licence. Instead of the boundaries of belief regarding who matters as inclusive of all
humanity, they are redrawn so that some people are believed to be dispensable, even
to the point of their warranting elimination. The subsequent cocktail of beliefs –
whether nationalist, tribal or even internationalist in form – mixed more often than
not with distorted religion, becomes a deadly poison which attacks the heart of any
form of citizenship which wants to acknowledge the independent worth of others.
Throughout the arena of citizenship, the beliefs and values of individuals and
communities are involved. And this is true even when mercenary or criminal
interests are a corrupting presence, since they rely on different beliefs, which actively
ignore or reject the claims of a more responsible citizenship. Corrupt societies and
governments only magnify the vulnerability of individuals to such distortion.
This is not the place to debate the priority of beliefs over values. Instead, the
article proceeds with the claim that they beat from the same heart, so that values are
usually consonant with beliefs, though behaviour (for the better or worse) may belie
both. It also claims that a neglect of the religious character and ingredient in beliefs
and believing shows a lack of realism, which consciously or unconsciously may itself
be ideologically driven. Whereas values have received attention in the arena of
Citizenship Education, beliefs have not.
Religion: the name of the game?
By focusing on beliefs and believing, my intention is to highlight this strand of
human identity as one which is often overlooked, even though it is pervasive in
everyday behaviour. It is not my argument that all belief is religious, although belief
often is. Some expressly reject that label (the secularist or the atheist) and some
believing is of a different order (simply a matter of taste or preference e.g. that the
music of Dylan is better than Eminem). However, after Phenix (1964), taking
‘religion’ to be the most comprehensive, determinative, ultimate and intensive of all
realms of human meaning, links intrinsically with the beliefs that matter most to
people. Overall, the act of believing is at the core of citizenship, since both its more
passive and more participatory forms are expressions of deeply felt assumptions and
convictions about the nature of human being and of social and political belonging.
There is a cluster of words, which relate to this area of human existence. One is
‘trust’, without which, according to personal experience and the weight of social
scientific findings, lives fall apart. The sense of trust, or the lack of it, is established in
earliest childhood years (Bowlby, 1984). It is extended outward from nurturing
relationships to the wider world. Another is ‘faith’, which is co-terminous, as in
‘having faith in someone or something’. There are affective and cognitive
components of each, and their vitality depends on both as a guard against the
deceptions of a blinkered sense of faith or trust which is lacking in discernment.
Religion as cuckoo or crucible 573
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‘Belief’ takes on a more predominantly cognitive connotation, especially when it
takes the form of ‘belief that’ rather than ‘belief in’, but believing is more than skin
deep.2 Evidently then, trust, faith and belief are each both cognitive and affective in
different ways.
In their elaborated forms trust, faith and belief become ‘belief systems’,
‘philosophies of life’, ‘faiths to live by’, ‘religious convictions’ and ‘theologies’.
Each of these terms has its own connotations. Theology is perhaps the most specific:
though it has variants both between and within particular religions, it is usually taken
to include belief in God. ‘Religious conviction’ is less specific, since there are many
different ways of being religious, including non-theistic ones, such as Confucian or
Theravadan Buddhist. The term ‘faiths’ has also come to lose its specificity. Where
once it was commonly taken to have an expressly religious connotation, it is now
used in a more openly inclusive way to include secular humanist philosophies. In the
USA, James Fowler’s influential usage defines it as
a human universal. Most often it comes to expression and accountability through the
symbols, rituals and beliefs of particular religious traditions … But faith is not always
religious in the cultural or institutional sense … In the midst of the many powers and
demands pressing upon us, enlarging and diminishing us, it orients us toward centers of
power and value which promise to sustain our lives, and to guarantee ‘more being’.
(Fowler, 1980, p.53; cf.1981)
Within the UK, over the last fifteen years some within the British Humanist
Association have described their own position as one which has the form of faith.
Though this is contentious with some, who take a more exclusively rationalist and
secularist line, it has also come to be used by a recent Secretary of State for
Education to articulate his own secular humanism (Clarke, 2006). Another term,
which has had some academic currency is ‘world view’ (Smart, 1999a). It has the
potential advantage of German equivalence in weltanschauung, but is taken by some
to be more explicitly political and less attentive to the depth and intensity of religious
conviction. Similarly, ‘ideology’, has comparable breadth but is often given the
narrower scope of exclusively political connotation and one abstracted from personal
experience.
That leaves two other related terms, philosophy and spirituality. ‘Philosophy’
often suffers from a narrowed interpretation, reduced to logic or empiricism, and
poorly tuned to receive complementary wavelengths of meaning. The richer sense of
philosophy identified by Smart (1999b), drawing on classical traditions of both East
and West, comes closer to the realm of belief and religion. Its connotations may
include sagacity and wisdom, spiritual analysis, speculative cosmology, fathoming of
mystery and asking searching questions. These go to the heart of believing and trade
easily in the language of religion. Finally, ‘spirituality’ has for many in recent decades
come to be preferable to ‘religion’ (Heelas et al., 2004; Tacey, 2004). In part this
may be because it is seen as more inclusive, less institutionally hard-edged and much
closer to the real heart of humanity. But its territory is still that of deep believing,
with a special emphasis on inwardness, and its link back into philosophy and religion
has been powerfully expounded by Cottingham (2005).
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Reverting momentarily to the word ‘religion’, it is vital to recognize that behind it
is the range of different connotations associated with each of these other terms.
There is also the flow of personal meanings, which make up each religious tradition,
within which insider individuals will themselves vary in both the understanding of
what that tradition means and the degree to which they would wish to identify with
it. Although ‘religion’ has the ring of dependability in what it points to, at any one
time its resonance and vitality is fluid in character.
My point in all this is that citizenship without believing, philosophy of life, faith to
live by, or religious conviction is likely to be hollow-hearted and perfunctory. It lacks
the crucial springs of action. Accordingly, an approach to citizenship education,
which does not expressly include this strand of human identity risks surface skating
and missing an opportunity to become more deeply engaged in the process of social
and political enlivenment. There is an urgent need for disciplined attention to the
rationality and emotional integrity of believing and its development.
The bracketing of beliefs, especially those described as religious
Throughout much of the discourse of citizenship and citizenship education rather
more reference is made to values and valuing than to beliefs and believing. This is
evident from North America, as reflected in recent overviews of the related
literature, such as Althof and Berkowitz (2006) in this Special Issue or Lapsley and
Narvaez (2006) on character education. Again, in a review of what can be learned
from US- sponsored aid investments in Civic Education throughout the world,
whilst there are no references to religion, just two to family beliefs and two to
democratic beliefs and practices, there are 40 to values (USA. Office of Democracy
and Governance, 2002). From the UK, the justly influential Crick Report (Great
Britain (GB). DfEE, 1998), which legitimised the introduction of Citizenship
Education in England, makes 57 references to values, but only two to beliefs and
three to religion – and these latter only as a part of a list. The subsequent
specification for Citizenship Education in the National Curriculum speaks
frequently of human rights, but does not consider from where they derive. Instead
of referring to beliefs, it uses the term ‘point of view’ (GB. Qualifications and
Curriculum Authority (QCA), 2000). More recently, the point is reinforced by the
new handbook Developing citizens (Breslin & Dufour, 2006). In the 36 chapters, by
as many glitterati of the field in England, beliefs do not figure and the only references
to religion come in the one excellent chapter on Religious Education (RE) – by
Keast (2006), a specialist in the subject.
There may be several reasons for these oversights, but the three most influential
ones are as follows.
The first is the implicit view that there is greater commonality regarding values
than there is about beliefs. Lists of moral values associated with what it means to be a
good citizen, do indeed, share many features across nations, cultures and religions.
They include such virtues as telling the truth, care for neighbours, protection of the
vulnerable, respect for the environment and avoidance of murder. Although
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consensus is far from complete, recurrent features also extend to respect for
property, promise keeping, partner fidelity, loyalty to the nation, care for other living
creatures. A supportive invocation may also be made to the theory of natural rights
or the universal declaration of human rights, sometimes drawing on the classical
western tradition of natural law, but much less frequently on its ancient Indian and
Chinese parallels. Ironically, although not advertised, any such invocation indicates
implicit belief in their worth, and, as will be illustrated below, even legally attested
versions of constitutional rights are themselves ultimately dependent upon such
belief.
In such affirmations of shared values, what is also commonly glossed over is not
that they are in practice often interpreted differently, but that the interpretations rely
on a person’s predominating beliefs. For instance, in the case of truth-telling, what is
believed to be the relative importance of the letter and the spirit of what’s true? With
regard to promise keeping, I might believe that promises are good so long as they suit
my own convenience. As for caring for neighbours, I might believe in this more as an
idea than in practice, and, of course, that my own immediate family must come first.
My perceptions of need to protect the vulnerable may be influenced by whether I
believe that all forms of human life, however embryonic or decrepit, are of equal
worth. Similarly, I may well believe that any threat to my own life should in all
circumstances be countered, even if it means the death of others. By contrast, I may
believe that property rights are of far less importance than human welfare; yet
another may believe them to be inviolable. And, as for showing respect to other
living creatures as well as to human beings, my vegetarian beliefs may be (but not
always) health related, species selective or extending to even the ‘lowliest’ of life
forms, including plants and even flames (which some Jains would defer from
extinguishing).
The suggestion that shared values and common sense morality are themselves
subject to a person’s fundamental beliefs and an act of believing needs to be further
qualified. Those beliefs may be explicitly systematised and articulated, or could be if
necessary, but they are just as likely to be implicitly habitual. This does not mean
that they should be discounted as unreliable, or that only the former matter. On the
contrary, personal believing, however inchoate, has its own internal coherence and
conviction, as the individual works with his/her own sense of identity, meaning and
purpose in living and dying.
A second explanation of the apparent reluctance to give as much attention to
beliefs as to values is heightened recognition of the diversities of beliefs and opinions.
Travellers’ tales of the variety of local customs and beliefs, as found in foreign lands,
have been around for thousands of years, but the systematic documentation of such
has led philosophers and social scientists in more recent centuries to talk the
language of cultural relativity. More extensive travelling in the shape of mass tourism
reinforced this outside the academic world. Similarly, vicarious exposure, through
television, to very different ways of believing and behaving socially, has given further
impetus to the attitude of superficial tolerance of diversity, so that one person’s ways
have often been seen as good as another’s. Even if not totally abandoned,
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overarching beliefs and the importance of meta-narratives have tended to take on a
lower profile, or allowed to hold their sway as simply peculiar.
The third reason for relatively greater attention being given to the matter of values
and valuing rather than beliefs and believing is the double-fronted impact of
secularity. On the one side was the dominating trend in much western political
thinking and related academic scholarship from the 1960s to the 1990s that religious
beliefs and believing were on the wane. The combined insights from the natural and
social sciences were received as explaining away the meaning and worth of any
religious frame of reference. There really was no need of such hypotheses. And
especially in European countries institutional religious practice was seen as in
terminal decline. This view sometimes took a hardened secularist form which was
abrasive in its critique of any religious claims and intent on exterminating them.3
Perhaps more often, the view was simply appropriated by futurologists and the
media as a cultural given, without any need for careful and extensive scrutiny (Lorie
& Murray-Clark, 1989).
Such devaluation may be implicit in the thinking of some social and political
psychologists in undervaluing the variable of religion in survey work. Admittedly, it
sometimes shows up as statistically insignificant, but that may simply be because
what is being measured is, for instance, institutional attendance, rather than one of
the many other potential aspects of believing or being religious. It is certainly
significant that the massive International Association for the Evaluation of
Educational Achievement Citizenship survey across 28 countries makes little
attempt to be more sensitive in the matter of beliefs and religion (Torney-Purta
et al., 2001).
The other side of the impact of secularity arose as a spin-off from the separation of
church and state, for example, in the USA constitution. Whilst potentially prizing
religion in its separateness, there was an effective banishment of it from the public
square, so that it did not need to be given any particular attention, and most
especially not in schools where it would immediately invite controversy (Carter,
1993; McGraw, 2003; Gates, 2004).
Any bracketing out of religion from the attention of politicians and from public
education, whether due to these or other reasons, has latterly become much more
difficult to justify. The beliefs dimension of human behaviour has suddenly taken on
a higher profile in being a citizen. The actions of the ‘suicide bomber’ are regarded as
relativising the beliefs which inform national citizenship by appeal to a different
order involving what is understood to be in the interests of a greater global justice,
and theologically endorsed. The beliefs which endorse the claims and counter claims
of different orders of citizenship have been highlighted.
Religious beliefs and citizenship in national/international constitutions
Citizenship of a particular country, empire or commonwealth is usually associated
with certain formally attached conditions. It may be acquired by birthright or special
adoption. Moreover, whilst the sense of being a citizen of a particular nation is
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sometimes central to a person’s consciousness, more often it lies dormant,
reactivated quite one-sidedly during international sporting competitions, trade
disputes or even bloodier conflicts.
A check on the constitutions of individual countries, as also on those of wider
international entities, is revealing. They are all conveniently accessible on the
following websites: Political Science Resources at Keele University UK (Keele,
2006), the Richmond University Constitutions Finder (Richmond, 2006) and the
Texas-based Constitutions Society (2006).
Virtually all constitutions involve some affirmative belief statement as to the
identity, purpose and worth of the nation or the other entity in question. Thus, that
of Switzerland (adopted by public referendum in 1999) begins, ‘In the name of God
Almighty …’, and that of Indonesia (adopted at Independence in 1945) with, ‘The
state shall be based in the belief in the One and Only God’. China’s constitution
(confirmed 2004) is more elaborate: ‘The People’s Republic of China is a socialist
state under the people’s democratic dictatorship led by the working class and based
on the alliance of workers and peasants’ (Article 1). ‘The state organs of the People’s
Republic of China apply the principle of democratic centralism’ (Article 3). ‘The
state advocates the civic virtues of love of the motherland, of the people, of labour, of
science, and of socialism; it educates the people in patriotism, collectivism,
internationalism and communism and in dialectical and historical materialism’
(Article 24).
Once a constitution is formally promulgated and adopted, or accumulated by
precedent (not every country has a written constitution, for example, the UK), it
takes on the force of law. Whichever form it takes, even then, its credibility still rests
upon personal convictions collectively expressed, which in turn look to others to
share in those beliefs.
The extent to which, if at all, overtly religious belief figures in the foundations of a
state varies considerably. There are countries which declare their Muslim identities,
most of which do so in such a way that makes it clear that Islam will be the singular
religious ingredient in any citizenship education. This is true of Malaysia (adopted
1957) and Pakistan (adopted 1999), as also of most Arab countries. However, of the
44 countries with predominantly Muslim populations, only 10 are Islamic states,
with constitutions determined by shari’ah law. Because of the secular constitution
established by Ataturk (adopted 1920), Turkey’s is more qualified than most
countries with a predominant Muslim population in this regard. Even so, Islam
provides the normative context overall, continuing in subsequent revisions,
including recently (2004), pertaining to prospective membership of the European
Union. With education in mind, Lebanon (adopted 1926), more exceptionally,
acknowledges Christian alongside Muslim interests.4 Elsewhere, Cambodia
(adopted 1999) declares its Buddhist identity, as does Thailand. And Vietnam
(adopted 1992) joins China in prizing its Socialist credentials.
Many European countries which would once have boasted a Christian (Orthodox,
Protestant or Roman Catholic) allegiance, now do so in a more qualified way. There
is now no established church in Spain (since 1978) or Finland (Seppo, 2004), and
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an official government commission has recently recommended separation in Norway
(Church of Norway, 2006). Less predictably, in some countries, for example, the
Russian Federation (adopted 1993), the Orthodox Church is re-establishing its
position, institutionally both in its preferential status in relation to other
denominations and religions and its normative status for the school curriculum
and popular mind set5 (Verkhovsky, 2003). In other countries, the religious
association is being downplayed. The French model since 1789 has been
deliberately secularist: ‘France is an indivisible, secular, democratic, and social
Republic’ (Article 2). Some would say that the strictness of interpretation of
secularity has been at the expense of the fractured social fabric. They point to the
correlation of urban riots and disproportionately high unemployment rate within
Muslim communities (Cesari, 2005). Certainly, for the time being, trappings of
religion are banned from schools, both from pupil adornment and from the
curriculum.
Two other secular models away from Europe do it differently. In the USA,
resistance to one established religion derived from the Christian convictions which
the early seventeenth century settlers took with them from Europe. Wariness with
regard to religion in the public school system has proved a deterrent in many states
against the federal option to teach about religion (Nord & Haynes, 1998). In India,
too, sensitivity to the plurality of religions at the time of Independence and Partition
led Congress to insist that the constitution should be secular (Baird, 1992), thereby
deliberately establishing the principle that all the religious traditions of India matter
equally. Over fifty years later, there is now an emerging acknowledgement that
religion is too important to have been consequently left out of the school curriculum,
although as yet it simply figures within Peace Education (Government of India.
National Council of Educational Research and Training (NCERT), 2005).
Congruent with membership of the United Nations, the principle of freedom of
religious belief has become normative, although what that means in practice varies
considerably, not least in an educational context. It is not unusual for there to be a
stipulation within national constitutional clauses that if beliefs are perceived to
threaten the health of the nation, they will be controlled. This is widely used as a
response to groups identified as ‘cults’, and notoriously in China, in spite of
acknowledgement of more ‘mainstream’ religions, applied to followers of the Falun
Gong (Matas & Kilgour, 2006).6
Religion as a challenge to national citizenship
Anthropology and sociology make clear that religion thrives in small-scale societies
and tribal contexts, and that there, as in other social settings, it can serve to support
the immediate status quo and authority structures (the chief, the shaman, the tribal
elders), or, indeed, to point beyond them.
The history of religions also makes it clear that religions often endorse particular
nationalisms, not least with the notion of Divine Right of Kings.7 However; unless
their theologies are exhaustively identified with that status quo, voices from within the
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religion typically spy out such localising limitations and point beyond them. ‘My
nation right or wrong’ is just bad theology, for its sense of any transcendent reality is
too small – a category mistake, which sees a part as though it were the whole. Where
the voices of more global horizons are weak internally, there is commonly a louder
shout from religious believers from the same or other traditions elsewhere, as is
presently happening in criticism of the northern based government in the Sudan by
other Muslims and the World Council of Churches.
With some notorious consequences, the 1889 Meiji constitution established state
Shinto, centred on the Japanese Imperial Order, and it became an example of
religion turned in on itself. When its outward forms were largely dismantled in 1945,
it had been challenged not only by the Allied war effort, but by other versions of
Shinto (Sect and Shrine) (Smart, 1992). Some versions of the Chosen status of the
People of Israel distort that, so that it becomes a position of exclusive and superior
supremacy, quite belying the sense of servanthood and universalism found in
Biblical Torah and Prophets. As in the oft misremembered cartoon story of Jonah,
these also tell that the nation of Israel, along with other nations, is found morally
wanting by God and in need of penitence. Similarly, whilst some Brahmins would
argue that being Hindu is only feasible for one born on the sacred soil of India, and
then within a hierarchically restricted pattern of relationships (Burghart, 1987),
others see their faith as quintessentially bringing all beings into the position of
mutual recognition and interdependence – irrespective of national or species-based
origins. Christians from the first century onwards may have shown regard for
national and imperial leaders, but they have also had strong convictions about the
whole inhabited earth as looking for a new ordering which is characterised by justice
and peace. The House of Islam since the time of Muhammad has been in tension
with the House of Darkness, which is the rest of the world; but all creation, all
humanity, derives from the one God. Religions, by definition, point beyond
themselves.
There is a distinctive point here about the claims of nationalism: they are
relativised by religions when religions are true to their own proper credentials. Of
course, there are many instances where religions have been domesticated and tamed
to some local end, as already instanced, and as in the case of the Dutch Reformed
Church in South Africa. But, where they are true to the best in their traditions,
religions point beyond themselves to greater contours of concern. Far from having
God on their side, the ‘Godness’ of God is always also elsewhere and with others as
well.
Unfortunately, not all relativising of inflated nationalisms by religions is admitted
by those same religions as needing to be applied to their own institutional
operations. This is especially true when the institutions of a particular religion claim
for themselves the power of God and become absolutised. Speaking theologically,
such a move must be blasphemous, for there is no God but God. God may be in an
individual, in a group of individuals, but God as God must remain more than such,
or else misperceived and falsely delimited. If such tendencies can be detected in the
Bharatiya Janata Party in India, as in certain politicised manifestations of Islam
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(militant jihadists) or Christianity (militant crusaders), then they deserve to be
exposed by the global theologies of their own traditions. Human institutions are
fallible, and that needs to be acknowledged by both religions and constitutions.
This self-deceiving category mistake was evident in the two great pseudo- religions
of the twentieth century (Cohn, 1993). Nazism and Russian Communism each
sought to create larger entities than had previously existed. They broke up ethnic
boundaries and nationalisms in the pursuit of what they perceived as some greater
humanity. But the scale of human devastation that was given licence by their
relativising of local loyalties only became fully revealed in retrospect, in the
murdering of millions of Jews (Katz, 1994) and Kulaks (Applebaum, 2004).
Religions, pseudo or apparently authentic, may indeed challenge limited horizons of
citizenship, but they, too, need checks against their own inflated egos. Citizenship in
the Third Reich or the USSR was based on its own version of legal rationality rooted
in particular beliefs of religious proportions. Those could only be exposed and
defeated if they were challenged by other more humanly comprehensive beliefs,
combining both religious and moral force.
Once again the argument is being advanced that there is a belief dimension to
being a citizen. The believing in question may take moral, political and/or religious
forms. Accordingly, education for citizenship will be significantly lacking unless it
engages directly with beliefs and believing.
A long educational revolution: responding to the plurality of citizens’ beliefs
in the UK
Nations and religious communities alike have been traditionally reluctant to
encourage opportunities for challenge to their authority. It is as though there is some
institutional drive to favour uniformity. Yet, it is now more usual than not, across
both nation states and faith communities, for the integrity of individual conscience
to be affirmed. It figures within the apologetic of every world religion. And it is built
into the Declaration of Human Rights, which most nations have signed in joining the
United Nations.8 In effect, that is an acknowledgement that not everyone will think
alike. Although the principle of conscientious objection in times of war has never
been universally acknowledged, how and how well a nation makes provision for its
objectors is a fair test of its readiness to admit its own limitations. So, with religion is
respect for dissidents within its own traditions.
One further sign of mature democracy is that it not only permits dissent, but that it
also provides opportunities for the grounds of differences to be understood. Patently,
the contemporary world is host to an even greater variety of mutually challenging
beliefs than it already was 2000 years ago, though the extent of that itself is often
under-estimated. The strength of adherence to particular belief systems – moral,
political and/or religious – varies within countries and continents. Nowhere,
however, is it the case that only one belief will be found, and even in a society
which is relatively monochrome in prevailing belief, degrees of believing as well as
other beliefs will be uttered by individuals (that glorious human capacity to think
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unpredictably) as brought home by one or other of the electronic media which now
abound.
Because religious beliefs have had such a central role in most notions of national
identity, it is reasonable to consider one example of the ways in which their plurality
is being sensitively affirmed and worked with in an educational context. It may be
that, when done well, such affirmation already provides some degree of citizenship
education. It may also be that in countries wherein the feasibility of such religious
education remains unlikely at least in the near future, the model will be illuminating
for what might be done additionally under the formal heading of citizenship
education. The educational process involved is one of critical engagement rather
than passive instruction. In the course of deepening appreciation of the beliefs of
others, it encourages young people to think for themselves.
The model chosen is from England, which as a society manifests all the signs of
the globally mixed economy of beliefs: Christian by inheritance and the self-
ascription of over two-thirds of the population; secularising in that its social fabric
increasingly operates independently of a particular faith allegiance; and religiously
diverse, with Muslims as the largest religious minority (GB. Office for National
Statistics, 2001). (Without claiming that this religious demography is typical, it is
worth remarking in passing that, in one form or another, one-third of the world’s
population identifies with Christianity, one-fifth with Islam and one-sixth with no
particular religion (Barrett, Kurian & Johnson, 2001)). What is special about the
English model is that it begins by taking beliefs and believing very seriously within
the context of public education.
The political recognition of the diversity of beliefs in the UK has been a long
revolution over four centuries. In terms of its recognition within the context of
publicly funded education the time frame is shorter. State funding for schools only
began in 1870 when a partnership was established with the agreement that church
and state would collaborate in providing for the nation’s educational needs. Though
only a part of these needs, the matter of beliefs remained fundamental.
In 1944, amidst heightened WW2 consciousness of the explosive power of beliefs,
a new Education Act decreed that all schools should provide Religious Education
(GB. Statutes, 1944). Beliefs and believing were seen to matter for all children and
young people, but what was to be believed was acknowledged as contentious.
Schools owned by the churches (Church of England, Free Church and Roman
Catholic) and Jewish community, yet receiving public funding, had discretion about
this denominational RE. In local education authority (LEA) schools, the syllabus
had to be locally agreed by a conference comprising representatives of teachers,
politicians and the churches. There was also a conscience clause ensuring the right of
parents to withdraw their children from any RE; this is still in place (Louden, 2004).
From 1944 to the mid 1970s, these Agreed Syllabuses were Biblically based,
thereby providing a common denominator across the main differences of belief,
including the Jewish community. Thereafter, the syllabuses (starting with that from
the City of Birmingham (1975)) began to take account of other religious traditions.
This development was formally acknowledged and reinforced by the 1988
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Education Reform Act (GB. Statutes, 1988). The ERA stipulated that Religious
Education in LEA schools should take account of Christianity and the other
principal religious traditions of the UK; these were understood to be Buddhist,
Hindu, Jewish, Muslim and Sikh.9 No syllabus which ignored them would be legal.
The membership of Agreed Syllabus Conferences, which have the role of agreeing
any local syllabus, needed to be enlarged to reflect the diversity of beliefs. This also
applied to the Standing Advisory Councils for RE (SACREs) which were then
required to continually support and monitor the provision. With due attention to the
nature of religious diversity on the ground locally, attention to plurality of religious
beliefs subsequently became the established norm for primary and secondary
schools.
In 2004 there was a further development. RE provision nationally in England and
Wales is varied as a result of denominational schools providing education for around
one-quarter of all pupils and the existence of many different locally agreed
syllabuses. (Potentially these are as many as 150, but in practice far less because
some LEAs adopt syllabuses agreed by other authorities.) Following extensive
consultation with faith communities, and the British Humanist Association, and
interested academic and professional associations, the government published a
National Framework for RE (GB. QCA, 2004). Although it is non-statutory, it is
intended to convey the spirit of good RE across all publicly funded, including
denominational/faith,10 schools throughout England.
One of its distinctive features is that it sets out expectations from RE for all pupils
between the ages of 3 to 19 years. Rather than specifying the details of content,
which remain within local or denominational discretion, it indicates its expectation
that every child will be exposed to the diversity of religious beliefs, that their
understanding will go beyond surface meanings, and depth and discernment will be
encouraged in whatever personal beliefs an individual student comes to hold.
There is no assumption that this public provision for RE will be a substitute for
RE within a home or parental faith community. However, it is presupposed that the
various faith perspectives which are encountered in school will be authentically
explored – hence the involvement of men and women from different religious
communities in the local syllabus conferences and support councils. The potential
contribution from RE to the believing that informs an individual student’s sense of
citizenship is therefore intended to be real, and open (Gates, 2007, forthcoming).
Citizen as familiar face or foreign foe
In this English context, because of daily exposure to those from different
backgrounds, learning to read and understand religious and cultural diversity is an
important social skill. Being able to explain and corroborate what I and others
believe, where we agree and disagree, is an important philosophical and
communicative skill. The National Framework is clear that such skills are vital for
any educated citizen. Irrespective of the extent to which it makes sense to try to
identify ‘shared values’, there should be no false pretence that deep down everyone
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believes the same, as in some legendary common core of religions. There should be
neither wilful exaggeration of difference between religions to exacerbate conflict nor
immediate rubbishing of a belief simply because it is a bit different from usual.
Learning to become not just literate and numerate, but also religiate is designed to
remove false stumbling blocks between people who believe differently, whilst
opening new vistas on living that may not have been previously noticed.
Forty years ago, there was a current slogan heard in Vietnam: ‘Kill a Commie for
Christ’. This year in the Lebanon, a similar slogan has been heard: ‘Killing a Jew
brings you closer to God’. Both slogans thrive on ignorance.11
It is not uncommon amongst the Muslim Arab populations of the Middle East
for the Jew to be perceived as an interloper who has dispossessed the Palestinian
people from their rightful land, and to have done that arrogantly and belligerently.
Much more rarely expressed in the Middle East is an awareness of the systematic
brutality of the Nazi extermination camps, or the centuries of pogroms which
preceded them in the other countries of European Christendom. On the contrary,
the malicious anti-semitic forgery, known as the Protocols of the Elders of Zion, which
was first circulated in Russia in the 1890s, is now regularly shown in serialised
cartoon form on peak time TV throughout Middle Eastern countries, and it is
received as true.12 The caricature of the Jews as the wicked source of misery amongst
Muslims is all too similar to their centuries old caricature amongst Christians as
money-grubbing, brothel keeping, spreaders of plague and kidnappers of young
boys.
Elsewhere in the world, it has not been uncommon for Muslims to be portrayed as
fatalistically indifferent to human life. The violence of the Crusades in the Middle
Ages is portrayed as Muslim, and only defensively as Christian (Kedar, 1984;
Frassetto & Blanks, 1999). According to some media comment, today’s suicide
bombers are proof of the madness of their religion. Actually, Islam shares the
prophetic indignation, found also with Jews and Christians, against poverty and all
forms of social injustice; those responsible will warrant divine judgement.
Unfortunately, as has happened in the past with some Christians (against the
witches and communists, as well as the Jews), some Muslims have styled themselves
as God’s agents of retribution.
All these facts deserve to be known in the context of any good RE and/or
Citizenship Education. But so, too, does the story of Gaffa Khan, the Muslim leader
who was vigorous in his use of non-violence to bring peace to the territory of
Afghanistan in former centuries (Bondurant, 1971). Or again, the quote contained
in the collection of those quotations officially recognised within the Muslim
community as amongst those most highly valued, because ascribed directly to
Muhammad himself, speaking as follows:
The first of people against whom judgement will be pronounced on the Day of
Resurrection will be a man who has died a martyr. He will be brought and Allah will
make known to him His favours and he will recognise them. (The Almighty) will say:
And what did you do about them? He will say: I fought for you until I died a martyr. He
will say: You have lied – you did but fight that it might be said (of you): He is
courageous. And so it was said. Then he will be ordered to be dragged along on his face
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until he is cast into Hell-fire. Hadith 6 from Forty Hadith Qudsi (Izzudin & Johnson-
Davies, 1980).
There are resources for citizenship education from across the world’s religions, but
these traditions deserve to be understood at some depth, especially by those
teaching, if pupils are to be taken beyond superficial impressions. Take any of the
following less obvious instances from what for many Christian readers will still be
only the partially known Christian tradition:
N Biblical portraits of marriage, including polygamous patriarchs and kings
(Abraham, Jacob, David and Solomon) in the Old Testament, and Paul’s advice
(1 Corinthians 7:3) about mutual recognition of sexual interests within marriage
(Barton, 1996);
N a Papal ‘fatwa’ against Queen Elizabeth 1st of England;13
N Doukhobar Christians relocated from Russia to Canada following persecution in
the 1890s holding a naked demonstration to make a political point (Hawthorn,
1955);
N being committed to truth whilst practising deception in Nazi Germany –
Bonhoeffer’s theological prison reflection after his involvement in the failed plot
against Hitler (Bonhoeffer, 1955).
Without appreciation of the reasoned basis in belief, any one of them may be quite
striking, but remaining so only at the level of oddity. Yet this is precisely the
challenge to those engaged in Citizenship Education: if we do not understand the
complexities of a religious tradition which is near to us, how much more likely is it
that we will be unaware of our ignorance in relation to other traditions. Some
opening up of the diversity within a ‘familiar’ tradition itself becomes important as a
means of unmasking superficial stereotypes and replacing them with a sense of
richness and vitality which might otherwise be missing. However, it must also be
acknowledged that some real understanding of the beliefs involved is necessary, if
the related behaviour is to be understood. Actions generally depend on motivations
and beliefs, and citizenship education is incomplete unless it attends to them.
Admitting conflicting claims to truth: young citizens engaging with different
beliefs and identities
Reverting more directly to the approach to RE and citizenship education found in
England, there is a clear expectation that, as a necessary component in the
development of their own beliefs and values, from their earliest years in school
children will be introduced to the diversity of what people believe. Far from proving
to be very confusing for them, experience suggests that the risk of confusion is much
greater in the absence of such teaching from the curriculum (Homan & King, 1993).
Well managed learning opportunities have the opposite effect, as is evident from
individual school reports by the schools’ inspectorate (GB. Ofsted, 2006).
This is no less true with younger pupils than with older ones. The promotion of
exploratory conversation between children themselves, as much as between children
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and teacher, is a common feature of infant and junior school classrooms, not least as
a means to making sense of beliefs and believing and values and valuing. This may
come in the guise of ‘Circle Time’, or involve the use of Persona Dolls with different
religious identities. It has been most systematically developed as a fundamental
pedagogical strategy for good RE by Robert Jackson and colleagues at the Warwick
University Religions and Education Research Unit (Jackson, 2003, 2004). It is often
referred to as the ‘dialogical approach’. Julia Ipgrave has exemplified this way of
working over several years. Exposure to the otherness of people’s beliefs comes from
three sources: the children themselves, other children of a similar age but in different
schools (often electronically linked), and indirect encounter through handling the
emblems and artifacts of belief and identity (Ipgrave, 2001). In addition, Eleanor
Nesbitt has exposed the variations and complexities in religious belief and identity,
which can be found even within one pupil, sometimes because of parental
differences (Nesbitt, 2004). Whatever their background, all children and young
people have an entitlement to this process of exploration.
The main thrust of this RE tradition in England is to promote understanding of
beliefs and values, directly engaging with different versions and interpretations of the
claims to truth involved. The legal safety net for this is the existence of representative
Standing Advisory Councils for RE (SACRE) in every part of the country – 150 in
all. They sit alongside the local syllabus conferences and each is constituted to be
able to draw on the combined experience of nominated teachers, politicians and
members of the different faith communities. These ‘ecumenical councils’ are
remarkable in themselves. As already indicated, at the time of their first permissive
introduction in 1944, the potential for their faith diversity and disagreements was
derived from within the Christian churches. In the last twenty years, the challenges
in arriving at consensus agreement and advice have become much greater. They are
stretched both by the range of faiths needing to be represented and by the question
of how best to be supportive of educational experience in beliefs and values, which is
relevant in a rapidly changing world.
Another English example of distinctive student experience, which draws directly
on the SACRE mode of operation, is that of Young People’s SACREs. This has
recently been pioneered in North Yorkshire, and is currently being extended
elsewhere. Following the model of the adult SACRE, Joyce Miller and colleagues in
the city of Bradford, a locality with a high proportion of Muslims, established a
youth equivalent. Students aged 16+ were nominated as representative counterparts
from each of interest groups which comprise the adult Standing Council. In
successive years the youth council has concerned itself with some of the issues which
have been exercising the parent SACRE, including the priorities in RE for 16–19
year-olds and local inter-faith relationships. Positive reports of the impact on all
concerned have led to the model being adopted in other LEAs.14
There is some similarity between Young People’s SACREs and the more widely
known phenomenon of School Councils. However, the deliberate determination to
work with the diversities of belief and the modelling of a statutory political process
carry major promise for the future.
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In drawing attention to current practice of RE in England there is no intention to
imply that comparable provision may not be found elsewhere. The related new
curriculum in South Africa is styled Religion Education rather than Religious
Education, and uses the word Religion to flag an inclusive agenda (Chidester, 2002).
Within the European Union since 9/11, the Council of Ministers has approved direct
attention to beliefs. Hitherto, there had been reluctance to deal overtly with the
substance of religion in any of its educational programmes. Instead, over the
previous decade there was a preferred reference to culture and inter-cultural
education. This was the apparently easiest way to avoid a confrontation between the
rival interests of continuing denominational ownership of education on the one
hand, and, on the other, a secularist belief that religion should not be studied in
school. Now, in accord with the European Convention on Human Rights (Council
of Europe, 1950), a reference to religion and beliefs has been added as warranting
further development (Council of Europe, 2006).
There is yet a distinctive feature in the English approach, which continues
formally to admit the vital interests of faith communities in educational provision.
Thus, the Dual System of educational partnership between church and state,
established in 1870, has now been extended to a plural system of partnership
between faith communities and state. Together they serve as one of the institutional
carriers of beliefs and values within the nation, pledged in a contract of mutual check
and balance. This communitarian dimension, directly linking education with its
roots in living communities of faith, offsets any tendency for a formal curriculum
requirement to lose contact with the passion of its sources.
Religion and ethics in the roots of citizenship and citizenship education
Up to this point, the words ‘ethics’ and ‘moral education’ have not appeared. This is
entirely because their centrality to citizenship and citizenship education is axiomatic
to this Special Issue. Moral values provide common substance in the discourse of
both education and politics. In sharp contrast, it has been argued that, whilst in
widespread use in contemporary politics, religion and its related vocabulary is more
ignored than attended to in citizenship education.
Whilst contributory explanations for this have been touched on, a further
consideration may be at work. Principled affirmations of the autonomy of ethics can
be a deterrent against acknowledging any link with religion. Accordingly, even to
mention the possibility of such can be seen as risking a return to religious tutelage.
By concentrating on the purity of a religion-free morality, the childish condition of
dependence on a contaminating heteronomy can be avoided.
Once the conceptual distinction between religion and ethics has been
clarified, however, there are two necessary caveats which public education
should heed. One is that, in popular discourse the world over, there is a
continuing mix of beliefs and values, religion and ethics. The other is that
philosophically the autonomy of religion is no less an important principle than the
autonomy of ethics, and the two autonomies have an endemic relationship, the one
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with the other. In their roots and ramifications they intermingle, giving mutual
support and challenge.
In the name of moral autonomy, assumptions of religious legitimation for acts of
partiality and prejudice on the part of individual citizens, national governments or
religious establishments deserve to be exposed as such. This will apply in respect of
ownership of land and natural resources, gender inequalities, the conduct of war
and, indeed, across all arenas of personal and social behaviour.
In the name of religious autonomy, assumptions of moral legitimation on any
front deserve to be put under scrutiny. For instance, laws are not necessarily just
because they have been passed by a national government; the appeal to universal
human rights is as much an expression of faith as it is of reason, as is any decision
regarding where the boundaries are to be drawn between human life and the claims
of any other degrees or forms of sentient being; and it is questionable that individuals
will do the right thing once they have been taught what that is or, indeed, have come
to evaluate for themselves what it might be.
The implication of this for citizenship education is that it will do a disservice to
children and young people unless it finds ways of giving appropriate priority to their
need to understand both the religious and the moral roots of being a citizen. In some
national settings, this may be especially difficult to achieve. Constitutionally or
legally, the extent of direct attention to religion in the school curriculum may be
seriously restricted. Alternatively, it may be specified as needing to take a
denominationally exclusive form. The argument of this article is that neither of
these positions is morally healthy, and if that is the prevailing condition other
curricular means need to be created to give more open scrutiny to religion.
More positively, the combined realities of global politics, local relationships and
personal meaning warrant properly resourced engagement in the context of public
education with both the religious and the moral in their own right. For children and
young people to be equipped to make mutual sense of how and why they want to live
their futures requires nothing less. The model exemplified from England at least
begins to do this, but it has long way to go before it becomes the norm for all even
within the UK15 in practice.
A concluding comment: cuckoo and crucible
The complaint is sometimes heard that religion is, as it were, a cuckoo in any public
school curriculum, which will seek to take over and oust elements which claim to be
more natural and native, especially when they are termed moral education or
citizenship education. This article has argued the contrary. Religion has been a
pervasive presence in human civilisations over the centuries and best guesstimates
suggest that, for well over four-fifths of the world’s population, it continues to be a
defining ingredient in how individuals characterise themselves (Barrett et al., 2001).
Far from being a cuckoo, religion is more a crucible. Though it has sometimes
paraded itself as the perfection rather than a pointer to such, it is actually a crude
container for the human clustering within which deepest beliefs and values are
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variously held and refined. In the interests of the moral education of global citizens,
no school can afford to ignore the matter of religion. Where that happens, from the
best of intentions, whatever the school espouses in its place may turn out to be the
intrusive cuckoo. What is then effectively ejected from the nurturing environment of
the school is the appreciation and testing of living faiths.
In sum, there are two fundamental points. Firstly, citizenship depends
upon beliefs and values, and these are both religious and moral. Therefore,
Citizenship Education which pays scant attention to the process and content of
both moral and religious believing is likely to stumble, for therein lie the springs
of active participation. Secondly, religion is too important – with its
transformative capacities for both good and evil – to be left to separate faith
communities to tend in isolation from each other. Disconnection between religious
communities, as between states, breeds fear and suspicion. It also imperils any
emergent sense of belonging to an inclusive global community of living beings – past,
present and future.
Notes
1. This can be illustrated from anecdotal reflections as well as research studies. For instance,
according to a Scottish Chief Constable: ‘I joined Sussex Police at the age of 18 and so I
probably had what some might consider as rather naive motives for joining. Like many
colleagues I wanted a career that offered variety, excitement and a meaningful role in making
a positive difference to the lives of others’. Edinburgh Evening News, 25 February 2006.
Similarly, from Ottawa a Police Sector Council study of 1600 young people aged 16–30
reveals that all but 6% saw public sector policing as an opportunity to do meaningful work.
For the third who saw it as a serious job option, the most frequently cited reasons were:
‘making one’s community safer’, ‘helping victims of crime’ and ‘being of service to the public’
(Ipsos-Reid, 2005). However, this is not to deny that motives are usually mixed, or that there
will not be variations from one country to another.
2. Extensive research, first begun in the 1960s, has demonstrated the power of ‘belief in a just
world’ to influence how individuals interpret events in daily life, a belief maintained in spite of
appearances and which enables sense to be made of otherwise distressing facts of life (Lerner,
1980; Montada & Lerner, 1998).
3. To the familiar Freudian and Marxist confidence that religion is being outgrown may be
added that conveyed in the position of Steve Bruce (2002).
4. For a descriptive analysis of the constitutional context in 44 Muslim countries, see Stahnke &
Blit (2005).
5. ‘Soviet citizens used to stand in endless lines to venerate Vladimir Lenin’s embalmed remains
on Red Square, Moscow. Now Orthodox believers are standing in round-the-clock lines to
venerate saints’ relics. In the latest example of such religious fervour, in over 40 days nearly
2.5 million believers across Russia, Ukraine and Belarus venerated what Orthodox Christians
believe to be St John the Baptist’s hand, after the relic’s return to Montenegro, its home since
1941.’ Report from Moscow Orthodox Patriarchate in Ecumencial News International. ENI-
06-0607, 31 July, 2006.
6. In Western Europe, Scientology has been subject to extensive legal proscription on this basis,
most especially in France (Vivien, 2001; Pallison, 2002) and Germany (Moseley, 1997). In
China, the proscriptions extend to forms of Buddhism, as well as less well known groups like
the Falun Gong; for a comprehensive overview, see United States Commission on
International Religious Freedom (2005).
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7. Within Christendom, since the time of Constantine in the fourth century CE, emperors and
monarchs were regarded as deriving their authority from God and this was transmitted by
inherited birthright. There is parallel across civilisations and cultures, from ancient Egypt to
twentieth century Japan or twenty-first century Cambodia. Indeed, the current Thailand
constitution (Section 6) describes the King as holding a position of revered worship. The
notion of the moral potency of the imperial lineage in Japan is vividly conveyed in Hiroike
(2002) II, Ch. 13 A & B; for a comparison with the Divine Right of Kings, see III, pp. 65–7.
In the wake of transition to constitutional democracies, the deference to elected leaders and
to the will of the majority may for some still contain a sense of divine indebtedness, albeit
mediated through a no less God-given right to vote.
8. ‘Everyone has the right to freedom of thought, conscience and religion; this right includes the
freedom to change his religion or belief, and freedom, either alone or in community with
others and in public or private, to manifest his religion or belief in teaching, practice, worship
and observance’. Article 18 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights as adopted by the
United Nations in 1948. ‘Possessed of reason and conscience, every human is obliged to
behave in a genuinely human fashion, to do good and avoid evil!’ Endorsed by 1993 World
Parliament of Religions as part of its commitment to pursue a common Global Ethic (Kung &
Kuschel, 1993). The full text and related resources are available from its continuing Council:
http://www.cpwr.org.
9. According to Section 8:3 of the Education Reform Act: ‘Any agreed syllabus….shall reflect
the fact that the religious traditions in Great Britain are in the main Christian whilst taking
account of the teaching and practices of the other principal religions represented in Great
Britain.’ (GB. Statutes, 1988). This was in direct recognition of the increased diversity of
religious communities thriving within the UK, and it was also deliberately reflecting the wider
global condition.
10. In government usage the previous terminology of ‘church school’ has been superseded by
‘faith school’ to reflect the fact that though the majority of such schools are related to the
Christian communities, there are also publicly funded Jewish, Muslim and Sikh schools,
albeit in small but increasing numbers. In its application to all schools, this framework
envisages critical reflection within any particular faith as well as a readiness to understand the
faith of others.
11. The first slogan was commonly seen on car bumpers in the USA at the time of the Vietnam
war and has been newly reproduced in the repetitive chanting by USA soldiers during training
in the PC DVD game Vietcong 2 (Kolar, 2005). The second has been seen on a poster on a
classroom wall in a Palestinian school, as shown in a UK Channel 4 TV documentary 31 July,
2006: Judah and Mohammed.
12. A devastating collation of publication and distribution in book and televised form is
contained in the Wikipedia 2006 entry on the Protocols: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/
The_Protocols_of_the_Elders_of_Zion. Because Wikipedia entries are vulnerable to abuse,
the extensive corroborative documentation of the extent of current broadcasting of this
material is a necessary guarantee that this point is not being exaggerated.
13. Leaving aside the 1605 Gunpowder Plot on Parliament, which was of September 11
proportions, the strength of lethal antagonism which Christianity has engendered is evident in
the letter sent by Cardinal Como in 1580 in response to an enquiry to the then Pope Sixtus as
to whether it would be sinful for two English nobles to take the life of Elizabeth 1st: ‘Since that
guilty woman of England rules over two noble kingdoms of Christendom and is the cause of
so much injury to the Catholic faith, and loss of so many million souls, there is no doubt that
whosoever sends her out of the world with the pious intention of doing God service, not only
does not sin, but gains merit, especially having regard to the sentence pronounced against her
by Pius V of holy memory. And so if these English nobles decide actually to undertake so
glorious work, your lordship can assure them that they do not commit any sin’. Cited in Black
(1959), pp. 178–9.
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14. Assisted by special grants from the Westhill Trust, there are now ten other Youth SACREs, in
the following Local Education Authorities: from 2005 – Bristol, Hounslow, Hull and the East
Riding, Portsmouth, Solihull; and from 2006 – Blackburn with Darwen, Kirklees, Newham,
Surrey and Tameside.
15. ‘Home grown suicide bombers’ are not an example of any weakness in this model, but rather
of its incomplete implementation. An examination of the quality of RE in the schools of the 7
July London bombers shows that it had been characterised as weak by the schools inspection
agency, OFSTED, in reports published at the times when they had been at school. This will
have impacted both on their own understanding of Islam in relation to other religions and on
the attitudes towards the Muslim community of their non-Muslim peers in the same schools.
See Campaign against terrorism – a paper prepared by the Religious Education Council of
England and Wales, July 2005.
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