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Yoni Birnbaum

ByYoni Birnbaum, Yoni Birnbaum

Opinion

Terrorists’ lethal weapon: fear

Being confident of our own identity as Jews should always be something we feel proud to do, writes Rabbi Yoni Birnbaum

April 6, 2017 12:58
115065593
3 min read

A recent European Court of Justice ruling makes it potentially lawful for an employer to ban the wearing of all religious symbols in the workplace. Not for the first time, however, the court’s judgment has sharply divided opinion, both in this country and abroad. On the one hand, the notion of “banning” the wearing of religious garments or symbols is a very troubling thought in a Western liberal democracy. But, on the other hand, people do wonder whether it might be reasonable for a company to want to project a “neutral” or corporate image.

Perhaps enabling companies to make this choice themselves, as long as it is applied equally and fairly, is in the best interests of business in general.

Part of me actually has some sympathy for the latter view. Employers have rights, too. There is an argument that the ruling puts a brake on people abusing a “religious exemption clause” to wear whatever they like to work. And I can also fully appreciate the fact that a full, or even partial, face veil worn by an employee in a customer-facing role can make it difficult for her to perform her job properly.

However, I think that the aftermath of last month’s horrific terrorist attack in Westminster puts this issue in a different light. Tragic events of this magnitude always lead to some public soul-searching. Could the attack have been thwarted? Is there anything that can prevent the radicalisation of people like Khalid Masood? But also prevalent is a profound fear that, ultimately, it may be impossible to stop another lone, crazed individual from rampaging through the streets of Berlin, Nice, Jerusalem or London with a car.