Stories about Sikhs, refugees and immigration:
Failed refugee claimant heading home to Punjab
Paralysed would-be refugee claimant Laibar Singh was to be put on a plane back to India early today after his failed bid to remain in Canada on humanitarian grounds. Well-wishers spent Monday stopping by Abbotsford's Kalgidhar Darbar Sikh temple to say goodbye to Singh, who thwarted three earlier attempts by the Canada Border Services Agency to deport him.
Vancouver Sun, November 4
Paralyzed B.C. man to return to India
A paralyzed refugee claimant who failed in his attempt to stay in Canada became teary at Vancouver International Airport before he was wheeled away from supporters. As Laibar Singh's wheelchair was pushed through the doors of the Canadian Border Services Agency's processing area Monday night, the freedom he hoped for in Canada was no more.
Canadian Press, November 4
Visitors from India face new questions
Document demands details of past political, religious, criminal associations -- even for relatives
Vancouver Sun, November 5
Terrorist was caught in Surrey -- then released despite deportation order
A suspected Sikh terrorist ordered out of Canada eight years ago went underground in Surrey until he was stabbed near a SkyTrain station there about a month ago, The Vancouver Sun has learned.
Vancouver Sun, November 7
Earlier: Stories about Sikh refugee Laibar Singh
Other stories from the past week:
Herouxville, the mouse that roared, is the inspiration behind Quebec's new "Cultural Clarity act"
The Quebec government announced on October 29 that future immigrants to Quebec will be required to sign a declaration of intent to learn French and respect the "shared values" of Quebec.
Barbara Kay, Full Comment, National Post, October 30
Earlier: Stories about religious and multicultural issues in Quebec
Crowds & power
If my reader celebrated All Hallows' Eve last night, will he also celebrate All Hallows today, or "All Saints" as we say in current English? And will he continue through this late autumn weekend, observing "All Souls" tomorrow? It would, after all, be perverse only to celebrate witches and ghosts and goblins, and not the morning light of Christendom that chased them all away. Who could be so perverse? . . . My column today is about politics, but I have gratuitously mixed in religion from the start. I do not think we can have a clear sight of politics, if we do not begin with a fairly clear sight of reality, which means eyes open, so wide as they will go, to everything before us.
David Warren, Ottawa Citizen, November 1
A biblical find
Script on pottery shard found near site of David-Goliath fight
CanWest News Service, November 3
Also: Vancouver Sun
Stuck between Heaven and development
For the past 30 years, Regis College, part of the University of Toronto, has trained aspiring Catholic priests and chaplains in a pair of small, red brick buildings on the historic corner of St. Mary and St. Nicholas streets. But in July, the Jesuit Fathers of Upper Canada Holding Corporation applied to the City of Toronto to demolish the school and replace it with a 44-storey condominium tower, which, seen from the air, has the contour of a peanut. Regis College, meanwhile, moves next fall into Christie House, an old mansion at Wellesley Street and Queen's Park Circle.
National Post, November 3
Rabbi donates book collection
Known for the spellbinding sermons he gave for years at Toronto's Holy Blossom Temple, Rabbi W. Gunther Plaut drew on a wide array of books as inspiration for his material. The world-renowned religious scholar and leading figure in Reform Judaism devoured books on everything from the life and times of Albert Einstein, to biblical-themed literature, biographies on Jews who played roles in Canadian history, and even a book on the cartoon character Pogo. The books he used for his sermons and writings have now been donated to York University in his name and that of his wife.
Toronto Star, November 3
Tokens recall Jewish lives lost
Inspired by a school project in U.S. commemorating victims with paper clips, Ontario residents are marking Holocaust Education Week in their own ways
Toronto Star, November 3
Falun Gong case a test of city's power: lawyer
If Falun Gong protest signs outside the Chinese consulate can't be regulated by the City of Vancouver, then no structures on city streets can be regulated, the city's lawyer told a judge Monday.
Vancouver Sun, November 4
Earlier: Stories about CBC's documentary on Falun Gong
Hockey's seamy side on display
David Frost, whose trial on sexual exploitation charges concluded here yesterday, may well not be convicted, but if only half of what was heard at trial is true, we ought to be gravely worried about the environment in which our junior hockey players live and play and study.
Father Raymond J.De Souza, National Post, November 4
Fight Bad Speech With Good Speech
A former Canadian Jewish Congress president admits he was wrong to champion ideological censorship
Ed Morgan, National Post, November 4
Earlier: Stories about "human rights" tribunals and commissions
Montreal Anglican bishop to authorize blessing of same-sex unions
The Anglican bishop of Montreal has said he will proceed with authorizing the blessing of same-sex unions in his diocese despite a statement approved by the church's House of Bishops - including him - saying the blessings should be restrained by a further two-year moratorium. However, Right Rev. Barry Clarke's decision avoids contradicting his fellow bishops, and himself, because of carefully crafted wording that required 20 drafts before all, or almost all, of the prelates signed on.
Globe and Mail, November 6
Earlier: Stories about the Anglican schism
Police do not suspect boy met with foul play
After an exhaustive search that lasted more than three weeks, Ontario Provincial Police yesterday recovered a body they believe to be that of missing teenager Brandon Crisp in a wooded area near Barrie, just north of Toronto. . . . Teachers at Brandon's Catholic high school held a prayer for him yesterday and instructed students not to talk to the media.
National Post, November 6
Church has no place in vaccinations
Pierre Trudeau, when he was justice minister, famously said: "There's no place for the state in the bedrooms of the nation." Similarly, there is no place for the Roman Catholic Church (or any other religious organization for that matter) in the public health programs of the nation. Yet, in at least one province, the church has thrown a self-righteous wrench into a plan to vaccinate schoolgirls against HPV.
Andre Picard, Globe and Mail, November 6
Earlier: Stories about Catholic school boards
The two solitudes of swearing: In Quebec, the f-word's not so bad
It is the most crude of curses in the English language, a four-letter expletive usually avoided in polite company. Yet in Montreal, the f-word is apparently not a swear word at all. A municipal court judge has ruled that a man who repeatedly tossed the expletive at two police officers during a confrontation was not swearing, because he wasn't taking God's name in vain.
Globe and Mail, November 7
November 6/2008