By Maryam Namazie*
For the first time in France, an international conference brought together defenders of laicity from around the world on December 8 and 9, 2023 at Paris City Hall. The conference was co-organised by the Association Laïques Sans Frontières (LSF) and the Council of Ex-Muslims of Britain (CEMB), in collaboration with the Comité Laïcité République (CLR) and the EGALE Association (Equality Secularism Europe) and in partnership with Charlie Hebdo, Marianne magazine, Freedom From Religion Foundation (USA), National Secular Society (UK) and Center for Inquiry (USA).
The event brought together more than 40 laic personalities, coming from the four corners of the world. They addressed different themes such as, the importance of laicity for women's rights, atheism in the Islamic context, contemporary challenges linked to laicity and its role in preserving democracy.
At the end of the conference, the Paris Appeal was launched.
For the first time in France, an international conference brought together defenders of laicity from around the world on December 8 and 9, 2023 at Paris City Hall. The conference was co-organised by the Association Laïques Sans Frontières (LSF) and the Council of Ex-Muslims of Britain (CEMB), in collaboration with the Comité Laïcité République (CLR) and the EGALE Association (Equality Secularism Europe) and in partnership with Charlie Hebdo, Marianne magazine, Freedom From Religion Foundation (USA), National Secular Society (UK) and Center for Inquiry (USA).
The event brought together more than 40 laic personalities, coming from the four corners of the world. They addressed different themes such as, the importance of laicity for women's rights, atheism in the Islamic context, contemporary challenges linked to laicity and its role in preserving democracy.
At the end of the conference, the Paris Appeal was launched.
The Paris Appeal: Laics Of All Countries, Unite!
- Because we refuse that religion dictates its law to the City (the “Polis”) and affirm that the separation of religions and the state protects the rights of all regardless of their personal convictions, be they atheists, believers or agnostics.
- Because we reject all discrimination and racism, in the name of our common humanity.
- Because we fight obscurantism, fundamentalism, communitarianism.
- Because we consider that the right to be different should not lead to a difference in rights.
- Because we strongly condemn any violence or constraint against the expression of free thought.
- Because we demand access for all to knowledge and to rational and emancipatory education.
- Because we are deeply attached to the values of freedom, equality and justice.
- Because we are for a world of peace where reason takes precedence over beliefs, and which recognises universalist and humanist principles.
- Because laicity cannot be confused with the secularisation of societies, we demand the right to freedom of conscience.
- The promotion of Laicity as a fundamental principle of democracy, pluralism, universal rights and freedoms in all societies.
- The complete separation of religions and the state in political structures and systems, particularly in the law, the judicial system, education, health and all public services.
- The abolition of restrictive religious and cultural laws in the civil, penal and family codes. We refuse all regulations and practices imposed on women which violate their dignity and deny them the right to bodily autonomy.
- The right to freedom of conscience and expression, including the right to change religion or to have none and the suppression of the offences of blasphemy and apostasy.
- Equality between women and men, and citizenship rights for all.
- The defence of dissidents threatened by the state or society for their belief or convictions.
- The right of all to live and love according to their free choice.
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*British-Iranian secularist, communist and human rights activist, commentator, and broadcaster. Website: https://maryamnamazie.com/
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