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Controversy erupts after schools pull 'atheist' book
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CTV.ca News Staff
Date: Fri. Nov. 23 2007 3:10 PM ET
The Centre for Inquiry and the Canadian Secular Alliance is calling an Ontario school board's decision to remove a children's book from its library shelves, "an overt example of the discrimination against atheists by the religious."
The Halton Catholic District School Board ordered "The Golden Compass" to be removed from library shelves at dozens of schools after receiving a request for review from a member of the community.
The book, written by popular British author Philip Pullman, has won numerous awards including the Maine Student Book Award and the American Library Association's Best Books for Young Adults award.
Justin Trottier, executive director of the Centre for Inquiry Ontario, is urging the books be returned to shelves "so that libraries may continue to be places of learning and imagination."
"Some of our greatest authors, philosophers and scientists have been atheists. If books written by atheists are banned for not conforming to Catholic worldviews, will the school board proceed to ban books deemed pro-Muslim, pro-Buddhist, or even pro-Protestant if they are critical of Catholicism?," Trottier asked in a statement on Thursday.
"Pretty soon the only book in their library may be the Bible."
The board -- which oversees some 43 elementary and secondary schools in Ontario -- has pulled the book from public display and two other Pullman titles from the "Dark Materials" trilogy. The books are available to students upon request.
Committee to review book
Scott Millard, manager of library services with the board, told CTV.ca on Friday that the review has been board policy since 1990 and that "any community member has the right to request a re-examination of learning or library material."
"We are an integral part of the community and people have the right to ask us about the resources we have," Millard said.
The Halton board has since set up a 12-member committee to review the book and recommend whether it should be available to students.
"It represents a wide variety of people, trustees, teachers, principals and consultants so that we have a wide variety of input," Millard said.
After reading the book, the committee will complete an evaluation form that examines a "wide variety of criteria" including grammar, plausibility, language, plot, etc.
"We're evaluating the book 'The Golden Compass' -- we're not evaluating the author, it's the book we're looking at," Millard said.
A memo issued by the board says the books are "apparently written by an atheist where the characters and text are anti-God, anti-Catholic and anti-religion," the Toronto Star reported.
After evaluations forms are received, the committee will submit recommendations to the board of trustees, who will then vote on whether the book is suitable for students.
More controversy
The Dufferin-Peel Catholic board in Ontario is also conducting an informal review into the content of the book. Staff members have been asked to read the book and report back on the plot, the newspaper said.
Similar concerns prompted a Catholic organization in the U.S. to urge parents to boycott a movie version of the book that is set for release next month.
Trottier compared the recent backlash to the campaign against Salman Rushdie's "The Satanic Verses."
The novel prompted Iran's Ayatollah Khomeini to issue a fatwa -- a religious edict -- against the author for insulting Islam that spurred death threats and inevitably forced Rushie into exile.
"While the campaign against 'The Golden Compass' is a mere microcosm of the 'Satanic Verses' affair, it is still an overt example of the discrimination against atheists by the religious," Trottier wrote.
Pullman, known for his "legendary atheism" in the British press, has never shied away from his controversial views on religion.
"The trouble is that all too often in human history, churches and priesthoods have set themselves up to rule people's lives in the name of some invisible god (and they're all invisible, because they don't exist) -- and done terrible damage," Pullman writes on his website.
"In the name of their god, they have burned, hanged, tortured, maimed, robbed, violated, and enslaved millions of their fellow creatures, and done so with the happy conviction that they were doing the will of God, and they would go to Heaven for it."
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I applaud the budget, even though Health Care and education may stay unscathed. Sadly this cannot last and I worry to later this year where cuts will become enviable. If anything, this provides the Wildrose Alliance plenty of ammo when an election is called.


Comments are now closed for this story
Joel
said
Here we go again!
said
Shelagh
said
KP
said
Kiefer
said
Harold Prenter
said
Connie Embleton
said
Jon D
said
Why should a Catholic school, dedicated to promoting love of God, occupy library space with a book that promotes hatred of God?
Here we go Again...again...
said
Canada was based on many individuals with many beliefs! I am thankful that because of this I have learned not only about the Catholic Religion but many others as well. How about you let people decide on their own what is to be embraced and what is not to be....
Gerry B.
said
Joe Dalton
said
Therefore, the Catholic separate school board should have the right to censor athiest literature within its own walls to an extent.
The media and individuals with too much time on their hands frequently stir up controversy where there should be none. Just because this book is not on the shelf of a Catholic school library, does not mean that children cant go to the nearest public library (an resource promoted by the catholic school board - imagine the shock of that to all those staunch anti-catholic school die-hards.) and take out a copy of any book that they cannot find within the walls of their own school. The Catholic school board is not trying to warp the minds of todays youth as certain people would like you to believe, they simply do not want to house a particular piece of literature that flows in direct opposition to the belief system that parents who place their kids into Catholic schools trust them to nurture and develop. If you want you child reading that book, and dont have a public library card, and your child is in a Catholic school, well there is always the public system.
John
said
Wayne D
said
Mau
said
GM
said
Wendy
said
Would a Muslim or Jewish school carry a book encouraging alternate religious beliefs or the absence of such? Unlikely. Would there be an uproar if they did not want to? Probably not.
Is the Catholic Church just an easy target or is this simply because Catholic directed taxes support their school system. If the latter, did we not just voice our opinion through an election?
Adam
said
Submersing a child in a world where they are only exposed to views that match your own is dangerously close to brainwashing.
Can we not give children the credit they deserve? They are more than capable of deciding whether they agree or not with something they have read. Assuming, of course, that they are in an environment that encourages free thought.
Richard
said
Kathryn
said
Heather
said
So what if the author is an atheist? I think it's time we all asked ourselves, what would the Flying Spaghetti Monster do? Pastafarians unite!!
S G
said
* I suggest that to be on even footing all books with a Catholic theme now be pulled from secular schools in Ontario.
Fraser
said
whatever ...
said
We atheists, as a whole, need to be just as careful not to force our religious opinions on others as we don't want theirs forced on us. I love how we call ourselves “open minded” and “intelligent” when, in my experience, most atheists I know are more closed minded and judgmental then most religious people I know.
I am not religous by choice, but to say I am "more intellegent" or "more open minded" then they are would make me just as bad as any bible thumper.
Here we go Again...again...again..
said
Bobslobber
said
Besides, since governments routinely ban the Bible, turabout is fair play, isn't it?
Vince Stenseth
said
Peter
said
Remember when intelligent design came along and everyone attacked that because of its so-called religious overtones? Okay hypocrites?
Well, Catholic Schools are NOT secular so what's the problem? Let them do what they want.
Re: Here we fo again!
said
Mike
said
Rod
said
IanM.
said
Dear Lord,
Please save us from your followers, and deliver us from hypocrisy. Amen.
Craig
said
They are not censoring anyone, the book would be free to view at a bookstore or public library.
Just Me
said
God made me an atheist.
Who are you to question his wisdom?
Kerri
said
lrw
said
DStack
said
Jim
said
They have butchered millions throughout the last 1,500 years or so for failing to accept Catholic beliefs, or for daring to question those beliefs. This banning is just a small part of that belief system.
Nina
said
Duane
said
Rob
said
kayak
said
I guess my question is this: If Catholicism is based on faith, can that faith not survive a simple literary challenge or can it only exist in the absence of any other choice?
Kevin
said
Bob
said
demokrat
said
How do we build a tolerant society when some children are segregated by their parents' religion and taught that the 'others' are morally 'lacking'?
Why do we pay for the right of one religion to pass condescending views on the majority - and still be favoured with tax money from that 'unwashed'?
Real protection from dangerous thoughts is to understand what the options are.
And this is why...
said
Abdul Wagner
said
Religions have to create a vacuum of ignorance to insure continued indoctrination of children into their dysfunctional and ill planned religion. That is why all of them ban or discredit any information that is contrary to their hodge podge faith.
Seriously
said
Ron
said
Atheist have for years been persecuting people of faith. Examples, removal of Christmas trees and Creches, Menorahs, Prayer in School, any expressions of faith in public.
I wonder if the "greatest people" he is refering to include Stalin, Mao, Hitler, Robespierre, Menegele and Joseph McCarthy. Perhaps he has forgoten that many of the things western civilzation have enjoyed the benefits of, are as a result of people of faith who have put their faith into action.
Don
said
Finally, regardless of my views, I do believe the Catholic Board does has the right to remove the book from the school libraries in light of parental concerns. Any religious based school system, regardless of the debate over funding, exists because parents want their children to attend these schools.
It's somewhat unfortunate but it is reality.
Tim
said
The problem isn't that the book is written by an atheist. The problem is that it is written to undermine belief in God and to promote atheistic views in children. Why should a catholic school support that?
RIley
said
FYI: Its a CATHOLIC School Board! They should have the freedom to have whatever literature they want in their schools!
If you disagree about Catholic schools being funded-thats a different issue.
But as Catholic schools they should have free will over what they distribute.
Do we allow books of hatred in our libraries? No.
Its always different when people hate Christianity though, isn't it? You can spew hate of Christianity but not anything else.
What a world we live in.
Our Silent Christian Majority needs to WAKE UP!
Protestant Dee
said
T Boyle
said
Colin Pritchard
said
bruno
said
Saul Ramos
said
Contrary to the church's belief, we no longer live in the stone age.
GWST
said
PJB
said
If the power-mad, immoral theocracy depicted therein smacks of the Catholic church, well, any resemblance is purely incidental, as they say.
Sandy
said
Ottawa Man
said
Michael
said
Nick G
said
Bic
said
He has also self described his novels as "My books are about killing God".
While this doesn't affect whether or not his stories are a good read or interesting it does, understandably, give justification for a religious school board to remove them from their libraries.
PhD
said
P.S. Duane, scientists should be agnostic -- that is they should question everything, any other stance is biased and prejudiced.
John Cassidy
said
Bill Rosmus
said
The same atheists complaining here would freak out if they were told they have to have religious books put on their bookshelves. Nice double standard twits.
I really hate when atheists push their brand of religion on everyone else. And it is a religion the way some get so fanatical about it. Canada was founded by followers of the Christian faith and became a very good country based on the morals of that faith. Yes there were some within it that did bad things. But stop trashing everyone who believes, just because of the actions of a few.
By the way, there are quite a few atheists who did a lot of very bad things in the name of trying to shoot down religion. The Communist Soviet Union for a start (can you say Stalin et al?). How many were sent to death camps or disappeared for religious teaching etc? Stop spouting the same old crap about how so many people died in the name of religion. We're talking about humans. If they didn't have that excuse, they would find another reason to fight wars. People are the most competitive animals on earth. It's why we hold the position we do over all the other animals.
By the way, I don't go to church and am not even baptised. But I think atheists have no more right to slag the religious as vice versa. Each person's beliefs are their own. You actions and how you treat others is what is important.
Duane
said
Antisaint
said
RIley, your "Silent Christian Majority" does not exist, it is a figment of your imagination (like God). Most people today in Canada are secular, like it or not.
Ron, here are some more good examples of the Catholic Church putting "faith in to action" like the Crusades or the Pope proscribing the use of condoms -- which many would identify as crimes against humanity.
cdb
said
I'd be overjoyed if Ontario reversed course and removed funding for all but the public school system.
confused.
said
Duane
said
Ashley George
said
Brett G
said
Get real. I think it's the other way around.
One camp teaches love and forgiveness, respect and humility. The other teaches nothing, only looking to try and destroy the beliefs of others. Screaming bloody murder and the end of world via Nazi-esque fanaticism, when a religious organization exercise's it's rights and freedoms in this country.
If a religious organization doesn't want an atheist book in their library, what does that have to do with you atheists anyways?
What's next... you going to ask Churches to denounce God and ban Bibles and Korans?
Radical atheist extremists always seem to get fanatical when it comes to religious freedoms.
The Scientist
said
George W.Wexler M.D.
said
Jane
said
While I abhor the idea of censorship, the library must acknowledge the concerns of its patrons ... in this case, the parents. The policy states that if the challenged material is deemed worthy, it will not be pulled.
Lets have faith (pardon the pun) that the reviewers are sensible enough to put this book where it belongs - on the shelf.
Just pointing out some details that seem to have been lost in a whole lot of rhetoric in these arguments.
Bob Smith
said
Fundamentalism, regardless of religion, has no place on earth.
Charlene
said
Remember what happened with Mel Gibson's film?
Craig
said
Also as a parent who CHOOSES to send my daughters to a Catholic school (all the while being agnostic myself) I fully support this school board.
Matt
said
Should a religous group be allowed to limit their materials to only those that promote their views. Should they also be allowed to hide any contradictory viewpoints from those within the group. From this perspective the behaviour of the Catholic schoolboard is IMO justified.
The second view is should a government funded body promote one set of religous beliefs and remove materials that may criticise those believes and promote an alternative.
Most who believe in the separation of church and state feel that this is an inappropriate use of public money.
I just don't want my tax dollars paying for the promotion of one groups religion.' Its bad enough my tax dollars do promote certain religions, but to actively try and hide away any dissenting viewpoint is just wrong. Hiding the other viewpoints is not democratic and not the job of the government.
Steve
said
You wonder why we have such problems in our schools.
Keith
said
Michael
said
DG
said
Blair
said
First the Catholic school system leaches money off of Ontario, then denies it's students the rights that Ontario allows those students.
I think this is evidence of a bigger issue than just the book, stop funding religious schools, of all kinds!
LW
said
Now, personally, I haven't read The Golden Compass and it's been quite some time since I read The Subtle Knife (Book 2 in His Dark Materials; The Golden Compass is Book 1), but I don't recall anything anti-religious in that book. I remember The Subtle Knife was a very good fantasy book, but nothing more.
And on that note, why is it that every book must be a psychoanalysis of its author, and why must every author's psyche be injected into everything they write? Can't people write for the joy of writing without being berated over things that may or may not be at all related to the topic?
L out West
said
eastcoastrob
said
N.M.
said
If it goes against beliefs of the Catholic system then why carry it?
If someone wanted to read it they could go to the public library or bookstore.
It doesn't belong in the Catholic school system.
As for mr Here wo go again again...
You say "In reference to all the Catholic School supporters...No problem! then please remove the school system from our Government support!"
Isn't that the same issue? Aren't you saying 'we don't like it here so get rid of it'
How hypocritical!
Shane
said
Mike N
said
If they want to ban this book go ahead. And parents can be happy that their children are growing up in narrow minded bliss.
The rest of us can go on expecting that our children grow up being presented with as wide a variety of viewpoints as possible so that one day they can informatively make up their own minds.
Pullman's a dolt but has rights too
said
JK
said
Oswald R D'Paiva
said
What is all the controversy about, should not a Catholic school board foster the love of God and religion? That is the very reason parents send their children to a Catholic school.
James F
said
It seems foolish to claim that the catholics by examining a books contents, atheists would claim discrimination--and by them so proclaiming do blatantly discriminate against the Catholics.
Does anyone not see the hypocrisy?
An atheist dismisses the core of absolute truth,
Yet ironically they make claims that it is absolutely wrong what the Catholics are doing.
By what measure?
Who stops atheists in this country from living without God? Wha wha wha. Where is the persecution?
Mark
said
Tell you what - when the rest of the so-called 'progressives' get as outrged over the removal of prayer and Christian material as they are outraged over this, I will support them. Until then, tough beans.
Stefan
said
So at the end of the day, do we really expect a Catholic schoolboard, so allow a book into their schools (despite being fiction), that promotes ideas that are contrary to the very faith being taught in that system?
As well, people blame the board for the church wanting only Catholic values in the system. Well, the book promotes ideas of God's non-existence. This is a no brainer folks. It has nothing to do with falling into the dark ages, or being intollerant, the church is simply doing it's job. No one is forcing you to send your kids to Catholic schools, or believe in the the churches teaching. I believe that it is secular society that needs to be more tollerant of religious beliefs, something this country's charter of rights and freedoms promises.
asdfadsfa
said
The article doesn't say the the book was banned. It was pulled because of a complaint, which is protocol for any book. It is now being reviewed to see if it is appropriate and can still be taken out by students at those schools, it just isn't on the shelves.
As for Catholic's being crazy for censoring. The high school I went to in Halifax was completely secular and banned To Kill a Mockingbird, now that's oppression.
CLOKE
said
Joey Tavares
said
The Catholic School System is a PUBLICLY FUNDED system. They cannot do whatever they want.
I am a Roman Catholic, and I think it's time the double standard of public education be erased. There is no need for a publicly funded religious school system in Ontario, or Canada for that matter.
Get rid of the Separate School System. Now.
CMS
said
By the way, I am not Catholic and my children all attended Public School - and I can't say that parental concerns matter very much in that system! My private opinion, of course.
Lart from Above
said
This isn't comparable to the "Satanic Verses" controversy. The Halton Catholic District School Board hasn't issued a fatwa calling for the death of Philip Pullman. Public discourse and distribution of ideas is a right enshrined by the Charter of Rights and Freedoms, but that does not oblige religious institutions to embrace works that are directly critical of their beliefs.
The first two books of the trilogy are well-written; the third has some odd literary flaws that seem to arise from the author's ideology. People need to tone down the rhetoric, possibly find out what they are talking about, and accept that freedom of speech and religion includes allowing religious groups to say what they support or oppose in society at large.
For myself, I'm looking forward to seeing the movie.
Relax
said
AnnaP
said
In the meantime, the books are still in the library, at the [circulation] desk.
James Randall
said
D Wilson
said