Sujet : Re: UK and Poland, religious instruction under attack
De : abakus (at) *nospam* suanpan.prv (RunTime 🇵🇱®)
Groupes : soc.culture.polishDate : 24. Apr 2025, 11:03:02
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Organisation : AI
Message-ID : <vud28m$1bcss$3@dont-email.me>
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User-Agent : Mozilla Thunderbird
W dniu 2025-04-24 o 02:28, andal pisze:
In the United Kingdom various associations are complaining that religious
instruction is being neglected. There is a shortage of teachers
(recruitment ceased in 2011) and the new Labour government does not seem
intent on remedying this. While in Poland, the Church is appealing against
the Tusk government's changes aimed at marginalising religious
instruction.
The social-labourists of the United Kingdom and the liberal-socialists of
Poland are discriminating against the Catholic religion and attacking the
Christian memory of their countries, in the name of a suicidal secularism
and an alleged ‘non-discrimination’ that marginalises, penalises and
discriminates only against Christian believers and in particular
Catholics.
The new Education Secretary of the British Labour government has been
asked in recent days to seriously address the issue of Religious Education
(RE) in schools. The National Association of Teachers of Religious
Education (NATRE) has warned the government that ‘religious education is
the most neglected subject in terms of resources’, despite a growing
interest on the part of pupils and an increase in pupils aspiring to
obtain the General Certificate of Secondary Education (GCSE) in Religious
Studies (Rs), specific courses to be able to later also teach religion.
Earlier this year, Ofsted, the public agency overseeing school education,
warned that a number of schools in England would fail to meet the legal
requirement to teach religious education in all classes.
English law requires that the curriculum provides for religious
instruction in state-funded schools, while not specifically teaching a
religion, must reflect the fact that ‘religious traditions in Britain are
primarily Christian’.
Her Majesty's Chief Inspector of Education, Sir Martyn Oliver, had already
reminded us last April of the need for a ‘robust religious education
curriculum’ for the cultural development of pupils and the future cohesion
of the country. The increased interest of families and pupils in religious
instruction, and the Labour government's corresponding silence in hiring
new religious education teachers, prompted various associations to launch
an appeal to ask the executive for a National Plan that would enhance
religious instruction and teachers in this subject. Bridget Phillipson,
Education Secretary, pledged last July to recruit 6,500 new teachers by
2024, but made no mention of increasing the number of religious education
teachers, whose recruitment has been at a standstill since 2011. The
Labour government's plans are well outlined in the election programme:
‘Increased access to sports and arts education, along with a strong
literacy and numeracy core, plus the introduction of a new focus on
digital skills, speaking and listening skills’.
Religious instruction, so necessary if it emphasised the country's
Christian roots, appears, however, neither tolerated by the new social-
liberal Labourism, nor by that Islamist part of the electorate that
allowed Prime Minister Keir Starmer to win with a large majority.
Donald Tusk's Poland is striding along the same perilous path, that of
writing a new page in the country's history, cutting off its religious
roots and traditions in the name of an abused freedom, secularism and non-
discrimination of others.
In the Polish educational system, religious instruction usually consists
of teaching the Catholic catechism, with teachers and programmes chosen by
the Church, but the lessons are hosted and financed by State schools, and
are widely attended even if they remain optional. On 22 March, the
Minister of Education, Barbara Nowacka, had removed the marks obtained in
religion lessons from pupils' final grades. According to the Tusk
government's August amendments, when fewer than seven pupils express a
wish to receive religious instruction, schools would be authorised to
reduce religion classes by merging them with pupils from different year
groups, with the danger of marginalising religious instruction and
reducing the number of teachers.
In mid-August, the Catholic Church and the Polish Ecumenical Council,
which represents minority Christian denominations, had asked the President
of the Supreme Court, Małgorzata Manowska, to submit a motion to the
Constitutional Tribunal to verify the constitutionality of the changes. On
30 August, the constitutional judges issued an interim order suspending
the government's planned changes to the organisation of religious
instruction in schools. In recent days, the President of the Republic,
Andrzej Duda, has warned the governing liberal-socialist coalition that
removing the teaching of religion from school education ‘would remove an
inalienable part of being Polish’ and of the nation's historical and
popular traditions, which cannot be renounced.
And?
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