This very lengthy Canadian election
campaign has revolved around many topics, but it seems that some of the most
emotional involve Islam and Muslims. And the way the three main political
parties handle these hot-button issues may determine their relative standings
on Oct. 19.
There have been debates about the intake of
Syrian refugees, and about convicted terrorists being stripped of their
Canadian citizenship, if they are also nationals of another country.
But nothing has gained as much traction,
especially in Quebec, as the niqab, the veil worn by some Muslim women that
covers the face.
In September, a Canadian appeals court
upheld a lower court’s previous decision to strike down a ban on wearing niqabs
at citizenship ceremonies. The Harper government wants to uphold the ban and
said it will take the issue to the Supreme Court of Canada.
The prime minister has repeatedly insisted
that the “overwhelming majority” of Canadians, as well as “moderate Muslims,” agree
with his party’s position.
He may be right. Canadians right across the
political spectrum are opposed to immigrants being allowed to wear facial
coverings during the citizenship ceremony, according to various polls, and this
is especially the case in Quebec.
A poll commissioned by the Privy Council
Office found that 82 per cent of Canadians nationwide, and 93 per cent of
Quebecers, supported a ban. In Quebec the number of people who said that the
issue would have the most influence on their voting intentions was 18 per cent.
This is bad news for New Democratic Party
leader Tom Mulcair in his home province of Quebec, where the NDP won more
than half their total number of seats in the 2011 federal election. Support for
the New Democrats, who oppose a ban, has been plummeting in their provincial
stronghold.
Justin Trudeau’s Liberals also disagree
with the government’s stand, but his party has far less to lose. Liberal
strength is concentrated among anglophones on the island of Montreal; these voters
are less concerned with the niqab issue than are francophones, who see it as a
cultural intrusion.
For that same reason, the separatist Bloc
Québécois also opposes the niqab and has been targeting the NDP. One poll
showed the Bloc leading among francophone voters with 30 per cent of the vote
compared with the NDP’s 27 per cent. Until the niqab issue took hold,
most of these francophones were supporting the NDP.
There is a difference of opinion amongst
scholars in Islam as to whether or not covering the face is obligatory,
recommended, or simply a matter of culture, and its use varies in Muslim
countries.
For example, the vast majority of Egyptian
Muslim women wear a form of veil that covers the hair but leaves the face
uncovered. But the number of women wearing the full niqab has increased
dramatically in the past 10 to 20 years.
However, most Canadians are not going to immerse
themselves in Islamic theology and jurisprudence; they will relate to the niqab
in a visceral and emotional way. And it may continue to resonate with much of
the public long after this election is over.
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