#SchoolsReligion: Court nixes promotion of one dominant religion

The High Court in Johannesburg ruled on Wednesday that no public school could adhere and promote one single religion. File picture: Independent Media

The High Court in Johannesburg ruled on Wednesday that no public school could adhere and promote one single religion. File picture: Independent Media

Published Jun 28, 2017

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Johannesburg - The High Court in Johannesburg ruled on Wednesday that no public school could adhere and promote one single religion.

"It is declared that it offends for a public school to promote or allow its staff to promote that it, as a public school, adheres to only one, or predominantly only one religion, to the exclusion of others; and to hold out that it promotes the interest of any one religion in favour of others," Judge Willem van der Linde said in handing down his ruling.

Last month, an application by the Organisation for Religious Education and Democracy (OGOD) was brought to the high court requesting it to rule against having one dominant religion observed at public schools.

During proceedings, van der Linde said that the Constitution supported both parties in the case, in that everyone had the right to religion which they could practice in public and that attendance was free and voluntary.

OGOD had argued that Constitutional rights which would be infringed included the right to equality, belief, as well as the freedom of religion.

Van der Linde said that the court remained concerned by the issue of a public school endorsing one religion.

Reverend Kenneth Meshoe from the African Christian Democratic Party on the judgment handed down by the South Gauteng High Court on religion in public schools. VIDEO: Lindi Masinga/ANA

"The need to celebrate diversity has been emphasised in the judgment."

 

"We have found that neither school or SGB [school governing body] can say they subscribe to a specific religion," van der Linde said.

OGOD brought the application against six schools - Laerskool Randhart, Laerskool Baanbreker, Laerskool Garsfontein, Hoërskool Linden, Hoërskool Oudtshoorn and Oudtshoorn Gimnasium - arguing that religious practices at these schools resulted in the suppression of scientific teachings of evolution, and a religious ethos that was a form of coercion and an abuse of learners' rights.

Teresa Conradie on behalf of the Charter of Religious Right & Freedoms (friend of the court) explains the order of the South Gauteng High Court on religion in public schools. VIDEO: Lindi Masinga/ANA

African News Agency

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