National Secular Society ★ Decision comes after Supreme Court found RE and collective worship in Northern Ireland breach human rights.
The Northern Ireland Executive has announced a review of the core Religious Education (RE) syllabus, following a Supreme Court ruling that current RE arrangements breach human rights.
In November, the UK Supreme Court unanimously allowed the appeal in the case of JR87 - a daughter and father from Belfast who argued Christian-based RE and collective worship in Northern Ireland's schools are incompatible with the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR).
The Court found the current RE syllabus promotes faith development in a manner that amounts to indoctrination. This included encouraging children to accept ideas such as creation being "the gift of God" as "absolute truths", according to the review.
In a statement to the NI Assembly yesterday, Minister of Education Paul Givan said it was "necessary" to review the core syllabus in light of the judgment, in order to ensure knowledge is "conveyed in an objective, critical, and pluralistic manner".
Christianity will remain "central" to the revised syllabus, Givan said, due to the "reality of Northern Ireland's historical, cultural and legal context".
The Northern Ireland Executive has announced a review of the core Religious Education (RE) syllabus, following a Supreme Court ruling that current RE arrangements breach human rights.
In November, the UK Supreme Court unanimously allowed the appeal in the case of JR87 - a daughter and father from Belfast who argued Christian-based RE and collective worship in Northern Ireland's schools are incompatible with the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR).
The Court found the current RE syllabus promotes faith development in a manner that amounts to indoctrination. This included encouraging children to accept ideas such as creation being "the gift of God" as "absolute truths", according to the review.
In a statement to the NI Assembly yesterday, Minister of Education Paul Givan said it was "necessary" to review the core syllabus in light of the judgment, in order to ensure knowledge is "conveyed in an objective, critical, and pluralistic manner".
Christianity will remain "central" to the revised syllabus, Givan said, due to the "reality of Northern Ireland's historical, cultural and legal context".
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