Christian leaders cause shock and dismay

The head of the Roman Catholic Church in England and Wales, Cardinal Cormac Murphy-O’Connor, and Church of England bishop Reverend Tom Butler have both suggested that Muslim faith schools may be inappropriate for Christian children.

The comments are likely to feed into the debate about faith schools, and the wider question of multicultural Britain in the wake of the London bombings.

Speaking on a BBC Two programme, God and the Politicians, due for broadcast tomorrow, Cardinal Murphy-O’Connor said he welcomed Jewish and Muslim parents sending their children to Catholic schools.

But he said he would not want large numbers of Catholic children going to Muslim schools, saying the "creed of Islam is totally diverse from the creed of Christianity".

On the same programme, Reverend Butler, Bishop of Southwark, said he would not have sent his own children to a Muslim faith school.

The general secretary of the Muslim Council of Britain, Sir Iqbal Sacranie, reacted with disappointment to the comments on the programme.

Mr Sacranie said he had received his secondary education in a Catholic school, and did not see why Christian children could not benefit from an education in a Muslim faith school.

h

More from Beliefnet and our partners