COURT SAYS PUBLIC SCHOOLS MAY NOT PROMOTE A PARTICULAR RELIGIONA mere six weeks after the case was argued in Court, the Johannesburg High Court this morning delivered its much anticipated judgment in the case of OGOD v six public schools regarding religion in schools.The Court order reads as follows:“(a) It is declared that it offends s 7 of the Schools Act, 84 of 1996 for a public school –
(b) The remainder of the relief claimed is refused.(c) There is no order as to costs”.Partial successThis means that OGOD, the atheist organisation who took the six schools (all of whom have a Christian ethos and/or promote Christian values) to Court, was only partially successful in its application in that:
The effect of the Order is that, although the schools (or the SGBs) are not specifically ordered to do (or not do) something by the Court, the declaratory relief and judgment, in the words of the Court, “may legitimately serve as a guide to them”.In other words, while the SGB rules stand until set aside (or amended by the SGBs or on direction of the MEC for Education), SGBs have to go back to the drawing board and at grass roots level, assess (taking into consideration the imperative for diversity embodied in the Constitution and national and provincial legislation, and in consultation with the Department of Education) whether their religious policies and rules (including religious observances) are legally compliant or not and make the necessary adjustments.Importantly, the judgment confirms that South Africa is not a secular State and further upholds section 15(2) of our Constitution, in terms whereof religious observances (which have to be given an “expansive meaning” and includes “all forms of external manifestation of religion, conscience and belief”) may be conducted at State or State-aided institutions (including therefore public schools), on the following conditions:
The judgmentThe judgment, which was delivered by Judge Van der Westhuizen (with Judges Lamont and Siwendu concurring), identifies the true issues as follows:
In answering these questions, the Court turned to the Constitution as the starting point and found that in view of the fact that “South Africa belongs to all who live in it, united in our diversity” (Preamble to the Constitution), the approach to be adopted is one of neutrality and even-handedness; the State should not be seen to be picking sides in matters of religion.Turning next to a discussion of the relevant provisions in the Constitution, national and provincial legislation, the Court finds that it is the responsibility of School Governing Bodies (SGBs) to determine the religious policy (“rules”) of public schools – but that this has to be done subject to the Constitution, national and provincial legislation (all of which point to a need to respect diversity), and also in consultation with the Department of Education who must vet the policy. (On a technical point, the Court found that as the SGBs themselves have not been joined as parties to the dispute, interdictory relief was not available against the schools).Having considered this “body of laws” dealing with religious matters (including religious observances) at schools, the Court, on a further technical point, found that it was not open to OGOD to rely directly on the Constitution as it has done. What OGOD should have done in bringing the matter to Court, is to have attacked either the schools’ conduct on the basis that it violates the SGB’s rules, or to have attacked the rules itself on the basis that it violates the Schools Act (“the principle of subsidiarity” which requires that an applicant makes it pathway from the bottom up, starting with the SGB rules, then the provincial and national legislation, and ending only with the Constitution).The Court then turned to deal with the National Religion Policy, which it found (in favour of the schools, and against the Minister of Education) was not enforceable against schools as if it was law. The Court found that the Policy does have “intra-governmental force as a policy direction” however, in that it will inform the Department of Education in so far as they deal with and have to vet SGBs’ religious policies.The final pages of the judgment, focus on the issue of “single faith branding”. The question the Court asked, was “may a public school, through rules laid down by its SGB relative to say its heraldry, hold out that it is exclusively a Jewish, or a Christian, or a Muslim, or a Buddhist, or an atheist, school” – even when 100% of the learners / parents in that school, are Jewish, Christian, Muslim, Buddhist or atheist?In this regard, the Court found as follows: Public schools are juristic entities and organs of State. The Constitution recognises that the society within which public schools function, is diverse. Our Constitutional Court has on many occasions recognised the need to celebrate this diversity, and the concept of the unity of our nation from this diversity. This is echoed by the Schools Act. SGBs are thus required to respect this overarching constitutional theme of diversity. Neither the Constitution, nor the Schools Act confers on a public school or SGB the right to adopt the ethos of one single religion to the exclusion of others.Turning then to the question posed at the outset, namely whether a public school may hold out that it has adopted one religion to the exclusion of others, the Court “suggested” that the answer is “no” for the following reasons:
It is open to any of the parties to appeal the judgment (probably to the Supreme Court of Appeal) within the required time periods for applications for leave to appeal, which is three weeks from the day of judgment.
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