Baroness Warsi warns of ‘militant secularisation’

In an article for The Daily Telegraph, she writes that religion is being ‘sidelined, marginalised and downgraded’.


Afp February 14, 2012

LONDON: Britain must embrace its Christian roots and avoid falling into the grip of “militant secularisation”, British Muslim cabinet member Baroness Sayeeda Warsi has said.

In an article for British newspaper The Daily Telegraph, Cabinet Office minister and Conservative co-chairwoman Warsi argued that people must “feel stronger in their religious identities” in order to create a “just society”.

She said that faith had been “neglected, undermined and attacked” by governments in recent years and urged Europe to become “more confident and more comfortable in its Christianity”.

The life peeress is leading the largest-ever ministerial delegation from the UK to the Holy See, reciprocating Pope Benedict XVI’s state visit to Britain in September. The group has been granted an audience with the pope on Tuesday.

Warsi insisted that the visit was more than a Valentine’s Day “love-in”, adding: “This is about recognising the deep and intrinsic role of faith here in Britain and overseas.

“I will be arguing that to create a more just society, people need to feel stronger in their religious identities and more confident in their creeds,” she wrote in The Telegraph.

“In practice this means individuals not diluting their faiths and nations not denying their religious heritages.”

She said Europe’s culture and values stemmed from centuries of Christian belief, adding: “You cannot and should not extract these Christian foundations from the evolution of our nations any more than you can or should erase the spires from our landscapes.”

Warsi, who is Britain’s first female Muslim cabinet minister, said she fears “a militant secularisation is taking hold of our societies” with religion being “sidelined, marginalised and downgraded”.

“For me, one of the most worrying aspects about this militant secularisation is that at its core and in its instincts it is deeply intolerant,” she added.

The visit has been arranged to mark the 30th anniversary of the establishment of full diplomatic relations between the UK and the Holy See.

Ministers, including Culture Secretary Jeremy Hunt, will hold talks with Vatican officials on matters including inter-faith dialogue, human rights, climate change and international development.

COMMENTS (11)

Striver | 12 years ago | Reply

French displayed their secular militancy quite aptly, when they removed the scarves off Muslim women who wanted to ear them.

Secular militancy exists, unless you lot are in denial.

G. Din | 12 years ago | Reply

@Mj: "Secularism just means the separation of religion and state — no more, no less. " I don't know whose "secularism" you are defining. In India, secularism (or "sickularism") has come to mean active engagement between the State and a particular religion, Islam, as witness the current fiasco between the Law Minister Khursheed, a Muslim, and the Election Commission (headed incidentally by another Muslim) where the State (in the person of its Law Minister) is intent upon social engineering by way of job quotas for Muslims. Secularism, in my opinion, means that the State has no business getting into your religious affiliation or absence thereof and treats all its citizens equally. It, again in my opinion, incidentally does not mean that the State, in enlightened self-interest of the society as a whole may not extend a helping hand to a section of society if it determines that is needed on the basis of a religious denomination. @gp65: "...the important condition is that they respect people of other faith." No one can make a demand that others respect his/her faith as that faith may not command that respect. The important condition is, in my opinion, that you don't bring faith at all into the picture. Let that be a private matter. "Persecuting Jews and Christians as USSR did, does not qualify as secularism by any means." No, it does not but that is how they defined secularism in the first flush of their success. It was a looney crowd that took over there in Russia then. They also outlawed the institution of marriage and for a while it was a free for all. Pretty soon that part of communist agenda had to be reversed.

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