Pineault-Caron secular charter testimony goes viral on YouTube - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 09:53 AM | Calgary | -12.0°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Montreal

Pineault-Caron secular charter testimony goes viral on YouTube

Praying on all fours on a carpet, what is that all about? asked Caron in French during her recounting of a visit to a mosque in Morocco where she was asked to remove her shoes.

Genevive Caron and Claude Pineault were shocked to find people praying on all fours at Moroccan mosque

Genevive Caron said she visited a mosque in Morocco and was shocked to find people praying on "all fours." (CBC)

A familys testimony at the secular charter hearings at the Quebec national assemblyhas gone viral thanks to YouTube.

Watch an excerpt of the Pineault-Caron testimony below.

Genevive Caron and Claude Pineault testified late Thursday afternoonat the commission on Quebecs controversial proposed secular charter that would ban the wearing of visible religious symbols in the public sector.

The couple told the commission about their experience travelling to Morocco and Turkey, countries that have a large Muslim majority.

Praying on all fours on a carpet, what is that all about? asked Caron in French during her recounting of a visit to a mosque in Morocco where she was asked to remove her shoes.

It is customary to remove one's shoes before entering amosque, and kneeling to pray and covering one's head are common Islamic practices.

Claude Pineault (centre) and his wife Caron (right) said their experiences in predominantly Muslim countries have informed their belief that Muslims in Quebec should not wear religious headgear. (CBC)

Caron said she reluctantly gave up her footwear and entered the mosque, only to find women and men praying on their hands and knees in separate quarters of the temple.

I remained really marked by this. I got back on the bus and said, Could this be? Praying on all fours on a carpet? Caron continued.

Her husband, Pineault, spoke about visiting an open-air marketplace in Tangier, Morocco to pick up a souvenir of their trip. He said he was pickpocketed by two people who were wearing some kind of religious headgear.

They searched me on the right side. I thought it was my wife. But then they searched me on the left side, he told the commission.

Who was under these disguises? Women? Men? I dont know, Pineault said in French.

What I do know, is that its unthinkable to allow people to walk around in Quebec, in the streets, in public places really anywhere besides homes and private places with such disguises, he concluded.

Bernard Drainville, the Parti Qubcois minister responsible for the creation of Bill 60, reminded Pineault and Caron that many Muslims who come to Quebec integrate quite well.

He told Pineault he didn't want to send the message that people from other countries are a menace to Quebec society.

Liberal Marc Tanguay was visibly taken aback by Pineault and Caron's testimony. Instead of questioning him at length as has been done with other witnesses, Tanguay invited Pineault to continue with his train of thought before passing the line of questioning over to another commissioner.

Read the transcription of Caron and Pineaults testimony here (in French, by searching Claude Pineault): National assembly website