Scottish Church says Catholics schools don't cause violence

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A spokesman for the Catholic Church in Scotland said Wednesday the suggestion that Catholic schools in the country are a cause for bigotry is "staggeringly intolerant."

"Scotland's peculiar obsession with religious intolerance has been in the spotlight again recently following the offensive and ill-informed comments of a former police chief, who claimed that the existence of denominational schools are at the root of the problem and suggested that sectarianism and bigotry can best be tackled by closing Catholic schools," Peter Kearney, director of the Scottish Catholic Media Office, wrote in an op-ed Sept. 18.

"This staggeringly intolerant attitude is symptomatic of a simplistic belief that educating children in a faith-based environment is wrong and will inevitably lead to conflict and strife in society," he added.

Kearney's comments came in response to a Sept. 16 column in The Scotsman, a leading newspaper in Scotland. The column, penned by Tom Woods, a former deputy chief constable in Edinburgh's regional police force, argued that "religiously segregated education" is the source of sectarian demonstrations and violence in the country.

"I have no doubt that the provision for separate Roman Catholic education as enshrined by The Education (Scotland) Act 1918, was a good idea 100 years ago, but is it acceptable that in the 21st century, we emphasise differences by separating five-year-old children based on their parents' religion?" Woods asked.

"As Scotland moves forward with equality as our watchword, our century-old practice of segregated education is contradictory to say the least," he wrote, adding that "if we really want to dig out the roots of sectarianism, we must do what's difficult, and have the courage to tackle the historical anomaly of religious segregation in our schools."

Kearney wrote that "there is not a shred of empirical evidence to back up" Woods' claims.

"To suggest that children who aren't schooled together can never interact or relate harmoniously to one another in adult life is clearly absurd. Taken to its extreme this would suggest that children from different parts of the country or from different countries or with different languages are doomed to perpetual strife as adults, since they didn't share a playground."

The disagreement emerged after several political marches and demonstrations have turned violent in Scotland in recent weeks, with clashes between Republican and Loyalist groups leading to a ban on some political marches in the city of Glasgow.

Scotland has experienced significant sectarian division since the Scottish Reformation of the 16th century, which led to the formation of the Church of Scotland, an ecclesial community in the Calvinist and Presbyterian tradition which is the country's largest religious community.

Sectarianism and crimes motivated by anti-Catholicism have been on the rise in Scotland in recent years.

An April 2018 poll of Catholics in Scotland found that 20 percent reported personally experiencing abuse of prejudice toward their faith; and a government report on religiously-motivated crime in 2016 and 2017 found a concentration of incidents in Glasgow.

Kearney said that schools are not to blame for the strife, which he attributed partially to anti-Catholicism.

"Sectarian, like racial, discrimination is not taught in schools but bred, through ignorance, in homes and spread through society at large."

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