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Canada's high court OKs Sikh daggers

School had cited no weapons policy

OTTAWA -- Multiculturalism and religious freedom trumped safety concerns in a Supreme Court decision yesterday that will allow orthodox Sikh students to carry traditional daggers to school.

In its decision, the court noted that Sikh orthodoxy requires the wearing of the daggers, known as kirpans, even though they are banned from airplanes and some courtrooms.

''Religious tolerance is a very important value of Canadian society," Justice Louise Charron wrote in the decision. The case involved Gurbaj Singh Multani, who at 12 was prevented from carrying his kirpan at a Montreal school.

''If some students consider it unfair that Gurbaj Singh may wear his kirpan to school while they are not allowed to have knives in their possession, it is incumbent on the schools to discharge their obligation to instill in their students this value that is . . . at the very foundation of our democracy."

Kirpans are already allowed in Ontario after a lower court order, as is the case in some other parts of Canada. Yesterday's ruling now opens the door to the practice, with possible restrictions, across the country.

Canada banned kirpans on airplanes after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks in the United States. Some courts ban them as well, although Sikhs attending the Supreme Court hearing were allowed to wear them.

Charron said aircraft were unique environments, but schools had the ability to better control different situations.

Multani's school had originally allowed him to carry his kirpan in a wooden sheath sewn inside a cloth envelope inside his clothing. But the school board overturned this, and the boy's father turned to the courts. His kirpan is about 8 inches long, with the blade roughly half that length.

The Quebec government argued unsuccessfully for zero tolerance for weapons in school, and some parents also opposed the idea. ''My first reaction as a parent is a feeling of insecurity," Claude Bouchard, a board member of the Quebec Federation of Parents' Committees, said after the decision. ''As a parent, is the life and safety of a child more important than religious freedom? I think so."

Charron said the boy had no history of violence, and rejected the idea that kirpans are inherently dangerous. She also noted that schools contained other objects that could be used as weapons, such as scissors or baseball bats.

Multani, now 16, is about to graduate, but he told reporters that the battle was worth it.

''Everybody should stand for their rights. I got it. I'm happy," he said, wearing a black turban and surrounded by numerous Sikh supporters.

Around 250,000 Sikhs live in Canada, and about 10 percent of them are considered orthodox.

In the United States, a federal appeals court allowed kirpans in California, but the US Supreme Court has not decreed a national policy.

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