Religion News Selection

July 12-19, 2020

A selection of religion news stories from Australia

(Research: Greg Spearritt)

 

ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT

Seven pulls 10-part ‘world exclusive’ series on Scientology on day it was due to air (The Guardian, Australia)
July 16 – Seven has mysteriously spiked a 10-part “world exclusive” series on Scientology on the day it was scheduled to air.

CrossBread: Megan Washington’s musical megachurch mockumentary is a joy to listen to (The Guardian, Australia)
July 15 – It’s 2015 in suburban Melbourne.

EDUCATION

Brisbane Christian school found to have discriminated against boy by demanding haircut (The Guardian, Australia)
July 13 – A private Christian school in Brisbane has been found to have discriminated against a five-year-old Cook Islands boy for threatening to expel him for having long hair, grown for cultural reasons.

INTERNATIONAL STORIES
Abuse

Vatican says bishops should report sex abuse to police (Sydney Morning Herald)
July 17 – Vatican City: The Vatican has told bishops around the world they should report cases of clergy sex crimes to police even when not legally bound to do so, in its latest effort to compel church leaders to protect minors from predator priests.

Catholic Church

Pope Francis ‘deeply pained’ by Turkey’s decision to reopen Hagia Sophia museum as a mosque (ABC News)
July 13 – Pope Francis says he is “deeply pained” over the decision by Turkey to change the status of Hagia Sophia — which was originally built in Istanbul as a Christian cathedral — from a museum to a mosque.

Islam

‘Thank you, our glorious revolution’: activists react as Sudan ditches Islamist laws (The Guardian, Australia)
July 16 – Sudan’s transitional government has been praised for its latest reforms, which decriminalise apostasy, ban female genital mutilation (FGM) and end the requirement for women to get travel permits.

‘Great first step’ as Sudan lifts death penalty and flogging for gay sex (Brisbane Times)
July 18 – Amman: Sudan’s decision to lift the death penalty and flogging as punishment for gay sex has been hailed by LGBT+ activists as a promising sign after almost four decades of Islamist rule, with calls for prison sentences to be abolished as well.

Religious Violence

IS bride can return to Britain to appeal citizenship loss, court rules (Sydney Morning Herald)
July 17 – London: A schoolgirl who shocked Britain by joining the Islamic State terror group in Syria must be allowed to return to London to appeal the revocation of her citizenship, a court has ruled in a decision with serious ramifications for hardline foreign fighter laws.

Other

South Korea probes church over massive cluster (ABC News)
July 18 – South Korean prosecutors have questioned the leader of a secretive church sect over accusations it hampered the Government’s anti-virus response after thousands of COVID-19 infections were detected among its members in February and March.

ISLAM

Melbourne Muslims feel ‘unfairly tarnished’ by reports linking them to rising COVID-19 cases (ABC News)
July 16 – The Islamic Council of Victoria (ICV) has warned against scapegoating the Muslim community for the rising number of coronavirus cases in Melbourne while backing calls from AFL star Bachar Houli for more people to get tested.

Uyghur father in Australia fears for his wife and children trapped in Xinjiang (ABC News)
July 19 – Mamutjan Abdurehim hasn’t been able to hug his wife or young children in almost five years.

POLITICS

Clover Moore: ‘Christ was a real radical. He took on the establishment’ (Sydney Morning Herald)
July 19 – Benjamin Law talks to Sydney lord mayor Clover Moore.

RELIGION & SOCIETY

Why the chaos of 2020 is turning us all into philosophers (ABC News)
July 13 – (Opinion: David Rutledge ) If you haven’t yet spent a few moments this year staring out the window, chin in hand and ruminating on the meaning of life — or its absence — then the chances are it’s only a matter of time.