A French court has stirred up a hornet’s nest by ordering a regional government office to take down the Christmas crib it set up in its lobby as usual this Advent.
The western town of La Roche-sur-Yon, in the traditionally Catholic Vendée region, is appealing the order. Conservative politicians in other towns, especially those from the far-right National Front, have announced they will resist it.
The court acted after a complaint from the atheist Freethinkers Federation, which said the crib violated the 1905 laïcité law separating Church and State. A federation official said the group pressed the issue in reaction to Catholic church support for the mass demonstrations last year against the legalisation of same-sex marriage.
Jean Baubérot, a leading sociologist, said the case reflected a growing focus in recent years on enforcing laïcité that began as a restrictive secularism meant to limit Muslim demands. “Once an anti-Muslim mood sets in, it ricochets and produces a tougher line towards other religions,” he said.
In neighbouring Belgium, two women disguised as police dismantled the large Christmas crib on Brussels’ main Grand-Place square in a protest against the Government’s austerity policies.
11 December 2014, The Tablet
Crib has to go, says court
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