PATEL
JCC: The
four applicants are the fathers and guardians of their respective
minor daughters, all four of whom are pupils at Arundel School, a
private girls school situated in Harare. The first and second
respondents are the Trustees and Headmistress of the School. The
third respondent is the Minister of Primary and Secondary Education,
cited in his official capacity, and the fourth respondent is the
Attorney-General, also cited in his official capacity.
The
applicants seek various declarators and consequential relief in
respect of the alleged violation of their daughters constitutional
rights. They also seek an order for costs against the first and
second respondents on a legal practitioner and client scale. The
first and second respondents are opposed to the application and aver
that it be dismissed with costs. The third and fourth respondents
have indicated that they will abide by the Court's decision.
The
Background
Before
2015 the long-established practice at the School was to commence the
day with prayers in the School chapel. Pupils were free to attend if
they so wished and a separate room was set aside for those of other
faiths who did not attend chapel on religious grounds. This
inter-denominational position was confirmed by the School's website
on the internet.
The
applicants and their daughters are all practising Jehovah's
Witnesses. Their beliefs are not similar to those of other Christian
denominations. Upon application to the School for the admission of
their daughters, each of the applicants completed a standard
application form in which they indicated that they were Jehovah's
Witnesses. Their daughters were duly accepted for admission.
At
the beginning of 2015, a new Headmistress was appointed to run the
School. She sought to introduce compulsory chapel attendance for all
pupils at the School in order to reinforce its collegiality. The
applicants wrote several letters to the Headmistress as well as the
School's lawyers to register their complaints. On 17 March 2015,
after taking legal advice, the Headmistress wrote to the applicants
insisting that their daughters were required to attend chapel and
that, if they failed to comply, they would be deemed to have been
voluntarily withdrawn and removed from the School. On 19 March 2015,
after the girls refused to attend chapel and surrendered their books,
they were told to go home. The applicants then filed an urgent
application to the High Court in Case No. 2717/15. Following a
consent order granted on 27 March 2015, the girls were allowed to
continue to attend the School, without being compelled to attend
chapel, pending the determination of the present application.
The
applicants aver that freedom of conscience includes the right to
practice and propagate one's religion as well as the right not to
be compelled to subscribe to any religion. In this respect, the
actions of the Headmistress violate their daughters freedom of
conscience and their right to protection against discrimination on
the ground of religion. Moreover, although any person is entitled to
establish and maintain an independent educational institution, he or
she cannot discriminate in the manner in which the institution is
administered. Thus, the conduct of the Headmistress also violates
their daughters right to education. The applicants accordingly seek
declarators that the respondents actions are in violation of their
daughters freedom of conscience and religion, right to protection
against discrimination and right to education. They also seek an
order precluding the respondents from refusing the admission of their
daughters to Arundel School on the basis of their religious beliefs
and failure to attend chapel.
On
behalf of the School, the Headmistress relies upon the standard
enrolment form signed by the applicants upon the admission of their
daughters into the School. She avers that this agreement, which
constitutes a binding contract, expressly provides that any latitude
from chapel attendance is at her sole discretion and that her
decision in that regard is final and binding. The agreement also
provides that any changes to the School rules must be observed and
followed by the signatory parents and their daughters. One of her
functions is to articulate the values of the School and morning
chapel is the only time when pupils come together in an environment
most conducive for the values and ethos of the School to be properly
impacted upon them. It is not compulsory for any pupil to participate
in any activity such as singing or praying or to abandon her beliefs
during chapel. What is compulsory is that all pupils attend and
evince respectful behaviour in chapel. The applicants were not forced
to enrol their daughters at the School. They should respect the
rights of the School's founding members who established an
educational institution that conforms with and pursues their own
values and beliefs. The School authority is constitutionally entitled
to establish and maintain the School and impose reasonable rules to
be followed at the School. It should not be precluded from pursuing
its religious beliefs and insisting on anyone who joins the School to
respect its views. Such policy is reasonable and those who agree to
join the School despite their religious views must be taken to have
necessarily waived their own constitutional rights.
For
the sake of completeness, it is necessary to set out the relevant
provisions of the standard application form of admission to the
School. Upon signature, each of the applicants acknowledged and
understood that his daughter had been accepted for entry as a day
student at the School on the following express terms and conditions:
“4.
That the School's rules and regulations, as amended from time to
time, shall bind and be observed by my daughter and, insofar as they
concern me, also by me. I further accept that by signing this
enrolment contract I will be bound by the Arundel Parents Association
constitution, which is available to me on request.
5.
That the School is founded on Christian principles, and all pupils
are expected to comply with the rules and routines thus implied. No
exemption from any part of the curriculum will be considered on
religious grounds. Any latitude concerning Chapel attendance, holy
days, special meal requirements, dress codes etc. will be at the sole
discretion of the Head, whose decision will be accepted as final and
binding on my daughter.”
Relevant
Constitutional and Statutory Provisions
Section
2 of the Constitution reaffirms the supremacy of the Constitution, in
terms that are significantly wider and more inclusive than those
embodied in its precursor in the former Constitution, as follows:
“(1)
This Constitution is the supreme law of Zimbabwe and any law,
practice, custom or conduct inconsistent with it is invalid to the
extent of the inconsistency.
(2)
The obligations imposed by this Constitution are binding on every
person, natural or juristic, including the State and all executive,
legislative and judicial institutions and agencies of government at
every level, and must be fulfilled by them.”
Also
relevant for present purposes is section 47 of the Constitution which
recognises the existence of rights other than those contained in the
Declaration of Rights:
“This
Chapter does not preclude the existence of other rights and freedoms
that may be recognised or conferred by law, to the extent that they
are consistent with this Constitution.”
As
I have already indicated, the specific relief sought by the
applicants relates to the alleged violation of their
daughters freedom of conscience and religion, right to protection
against discrimination and right to education, as enshrined in
sections 60, 56 and 75 of the Constitution. These sections, in their
relevant portions, provide as follows:
“56
Equality and non-discrimination
All
persons are equal before the law and have the right to equal
protection and benefit of the law.
………………………………………….
(3)
Every person has the right not to be treated in an unfairly
discriminatory manner on such grounds as their nationality, race,
colour, tribe, place of birth, ethnic or social origin, language,
class, religious belief, political affiliation, opinion, custom,
culture, sex, gender, marital status, age, pregnancy, disability or
economic or social status, or whether they were born in or out of
wedlock.
(4)
A person is treated in a discriminatory manner for the purpose of
subsection (3) if —
(a)
they are subjected directly or indirectly to a condition, restriction
or disability to which other people are not subjected; or
(b)
other people are accorded directly or indirectly a privilege or
advantage which they are not accorded.
(5)
Discrimination on any of the grounds listed in subsection (3) is
unfair unless it is established that the discrimination is fair,
reasonable and justifiable in a democratic society based on openness,
justice, human dignity, equality and freedom.
(6)
……………………………………………”
“60
Freedom of conscience
(1)
Every person has the right to freedom of conscience, which includes —
(a)
freedom of thought, opinion, religion or belief; and
(b)
freedom to practise and propagate and give expression to their
thought, opinion, religion or belief, whether in public or in private
and whether alone or together with others.
(2)
No person may be compelled to take an oath that is contrary to their
religion or belief or to take an oath in a manner that is contrary to
their religion or belief.
(3)
Parents and guardians of minor children have the right to determine,
in accordance with their beliefs, the moral and religious upbringing
of their children, provided they do not prejudice the rights to which
their children are entitled under this Constitution, including their
rights to education, health, safety and welfare.
(4)
Any religious community may establish institutions where religious
instruction may be given, even if the institution receives a subsidy
or other financial assistance from the State.”
“75
Right to education
(1)
Every citizen and permanent resident of Zimbabwe has a right to —
(a)
a basic State-funded education, including adult basic education; and
(b)
further education, which the State, through reasonable legislative
and other measures, must make progressively available and accessible.
(2)
Every person has the right to establish and maintain, at their own
expense, independent educational institutions of reasonable
standards, provided they do not discriminate on any ground prohibited
by this Constitution.
(3)
A law may provide for the registration of educational institutions
referred to in subsection (2) and for the closing of any such
institutions that do not meet reasonable standards prescribed for
registration.
(4)
The State must take reasonable legislative and other measures, within
the limits of the resources available to it, to achieve the
progressive realisation of the right set out in subsection (1).”
In
support of their contention that their daughters right to education
has been violated by the School, the applicants also rely upon
section 4 of the Education Act [Chapter
25:04]
which provides as follows:
“(1)
Notwithstanding anything to the contrary contained in any other
enactment, but subject to this Act, every child in Zimbabwe shall
have the right to school education.
(2)
Subject to subsection (5), no child in Zimbabwe shall —
(a)
be refused admission to any school; or
(b)
be discriminated against by the imposition of onerous terms and
conditions in regard to his admission to any school;
on
the grounds of his race, tribe, place of origin, national or ethnic
origin, political opinions, colour, creed or gender.
(3)……………………………………………
(4)
Any person who contravenes subsection (2) shall be guilty of an
offence and liable to a fine not exceeding level six or to
imprisonment for a period not exceeding one year or to both such fine
and such imprisonment.
(5)
It shall be a defence in any criminal proceedings for an offence
under subsection (2) for the accused person to show that, though he
committed the act alleged against him —
(a)
he committed the act on the grounds of the creed of the child against
whom the act was committed, but he did so because the school
concerned is controlled by a bona fide religious organization and
members of that religious organization or adherents of a particular
religious belief are accorded preference in admission to that school;
or
(b)
he committed the act on the grounds of the gender of the child
against whom the act was committed, but………………………….
.”
Lastly,
but very importantly, there is section 86 of the Constitution which
permits the limitation of fundamental rights in the following
circumstances:
“(1)
The fundamental rights and freedoms set out in this Chapter must be
exercised reasonably and with due regard for the rights and freedoms
of other persons.
(2)
The fundamental rights and freedoms set out in this Chapter may be
limited only in terms of a law of general application and to the
extent that the limitation is fair, reasonable, necessary and
justifiable in a democratic society based on openness, justice, human
dignity, equality and freedom, taking into account all relevant
factors, including —
(a)
the nature of the right or freedom concerned;
(b)
the purpose of the limitation, in particular whether it is necessary
in the interests of defence, public safety, public order, public
morality, public health, regional or town planning or the general
public interest;
(c)
the nature and extent of the limitation;
(d)
the need to ensure that the enjoyment of rights and freedoms by any
person does not prejudice the rights and freedoms of others;
(e)
the relationship between the limitation and its purpose, in
particular whether it imposes greater restrictions on the right or
freedom concerned than are necessary to achieve its purpose; and
(f)
whether there are any less restrictive means of achieving the purpose
of the limitation.
(3)
No law may limit the following rights enshrined in this Chapter, and
no person may violate them —
(a)
the right to life, except to the extent specified in section 48;
(b)
the right to human dignity;
(c)
the right not to be tortured or subjected to cruel, inhuman or
degrading treatment or punishment;
(d)
the right not to be placed in slavery or servitude;
(e)
the right to a fair trial;
(f)
the right to obtain an order of habeas
corpus
as
provided in section 50(7)(a).”
As
appears from subs (3) of section 86, none of the rights allegedly
violated in
casu
falls
into the category of inviolable rights enumerated in that subsection.
Accordingly, in the event that the applicants are able to establish
any violation of their rights, it will be necessary to measure such
prima
facie
violation
as against the rights and freedoms of others, in terms of subs (1),
and within the context of the permissible derogations contemplated in
subs (2).
Right
to Education
The
gist of the appellants argument, as I understand it, is that the
Headmistress of the School, through her ultimatum to attend chapel,
effectively expelled their daughters from the School. In so doing,
she violated their right to education in terms of section 75 of the
Constitution, as read with section 4 of the Education Act.
In
this respect, Adv. Mafukidze
relies
in particular on section 4(2) of the Act which prohibits
discrimination on the grounds of, inter
alia,
race, tribe, creed or gender, with regard to the admission of any
child to any school.
He
argues that this provision extends to contracts of admission and, by
necessary implication, to the discriminatory imposition of onerous
conditions after admission. Admission in this sense is not limited to
entry into the school but also includes the right to remain in the
school for the duration of one's studies.
The
gravity of such discriminatory conduct is demonstrated by the fact
that it is criminalised by section 4(4) of the Act.
In
the instant case, the applicants daughters, as adherents of the
Jehovah's Witness faith, are discriminated against by having to
attend the observance of a contrary faith that they do not adhere to,
unlike the majority of the girls at the School who belong to the
Anglican faith. This prohibition against discrimination is reinforced
by section 75(2) of the Constitution which prohibits independent
educational institutions from practising such discrimination.
In
my view, this argument is fundamentally flawed in relation to the
scope of section 4 of the Act and the notion of discrimination
prohibited by that section:
(i)
Firstly, what section 4(2) prohibits is the refusal of or
discrimination against any child in regard to his admission
to any school on
the grounds of his creed, etc. The plain wording of this subsection
is silent as to any discrimination that might occur after the child
has been admitted to the school. It would, in my view, be improper to
extend the express language of the provision to cover conduct that is
omitted, particularly where its contravention imports criminal
sanction in terms of subs (4). This view is fortified by paragraph
(a) of subs (5) which affords the accused person a defence against a
criminal charge for an offence under subs (2) with specific reference
to admission
to the school.
In short, the prohibition envisaged by section 4(2) does not extend
to any allegedly discriminatory conduct committed after admission to
the school.
(ii)
Secondly, the defence contemplated by paragraph (a) of subs (5) is
also very specific. It enables the accused person to justify his
refusal to admit or discriminate on the ground of creed on the basis
that the school concerned
is controlled by a religious organisation and that members of that
religious organisation or adherents of a particular religious belief
are accorded preference in admission to that school. In effect, this
provision expressly allows discrimination in admission to the school
on the ground of creed or religion in the circumstances prescribed.
Of
course, this does not mean that a child who is deliberately
discriminated against on the ground of religion after his or her
admission to the school is left without any legal recourse or remedy.
Depending on the circumstances of the case, he or she will always be
entitled to invoke the constitutional rights to freedom of religion
and protection from discrimination in order to challenge and counter
any discriminatory conduct in violation of those rights.
In
my view, section 4 of the Act, read in its entirety, does not give
any succour to the applicants cause. On the contrary, it counters and
undermines their position vis-a-vis the right to education and
freedom from discrimination on the ground of religion in the
enjoyment of that right.
Nor
can the applicants derive any sustenance from the right to education
enshrined in section 75 of the Constitution. Subss (1) and (4) of
section 75 make it abundantly clear that the right conferred is a
right to education funded and availed by the State on a gradual and
progressive basis. These subsections do not confer upon citizens and
permanent residents any constitutional right to private education,
and they cannot conceivably do so on any logical or practical
footing.
Subsections
(2) and (3) of section 75 deal separately with private or independent
educational institutions. They permit the establishment of such
institutions, subject to such State supervision and control as may be
necessary to ensure that they meet prescribed reasonable standards.
The right to establish and maintain an independent institution
guaranteed by subs (2) must be construed not only in the physical and
structural sense but to include as well the establishment and
maintenance of educational and ethical standards. Conversely, the
provision does not envisage any right to flout the rules and
regulations designed by the institution to safeguard its educational
and ethical standards. The only qualification to the rights of an
independent institution is that it must not discriminate on any
ground prohibited by the Constitution. This is the aspect that I now
turn to address.
Protection
against Discrimination
The
principal submission made on behalf of the applicants in relation to
discrimination is that the change of policy on chapel attendance
implemented by the Headmistress is not neutral. It is pointedly
directed against the non-Anglican pupils who were previously exempted
from attendance. As such, it is clearly discriminatory on the ground
of religious belief contrary to section 56(3) of the Constitution.
Moreover, it has not been shown that such discrimination is
fair, reasonable and justifiable in a democratic society as
contemplated by section 56(5).
Before
adverting to the democratic fairness, reasonableness or
justifiability of the change of policy by the School, it is first
necessary to establish whether it is discriminatory within the
meaning of section 56(3) as expatiated by section 56(4). There are
two aspects to consider in this regard, firstly, the stipulations
incorporated in the standard form of admission and, secondly, the
application of the policy after admission.
With
respect to the first aspect, the School's policy on admission is
that all pupils are expected to comply with the Christian rules and
routines of the School and that no exemption from any part of the
curriculum will be considered on religious grounds. Given that this
contractually agreed stipulation is intended to apply to all pupils
without distinction, I do not think that it is necessarily
discriminatory on the ground of religion. Every parent who agrees to
this condition does so willingly and actively chooses to abide by its
implications. Thus, as I have stated earlier in relation to the right
to education, it cannot be said that this mutually agreed condition
per
se
amounts
to discriminatory treatment at the point of admission to the School.
Insofar
as concerns the stage after admission, I am inclined to agree with
Adv. de
Bourbon
that
the previous practice of the School in exempting pupils from
attending chapel on religious grounds might be deemed to have been a
form of reverse discrimination in that they were indirectly accorded
a privilege that pupils of the Anglican faith were not being
accorded. As for the present policy of insisting on chapel attendance
by all pupils, I am not persuaded that the applicants daughters are
being treated differently from the other pupils on account of their
religion. While I fully concur with the liberal and purposive
approach to constitutional interpretation, I do not think it
permissible to amplify or expand the clear language of the
Constitution to encompass rights and obligations not provided for by
the legislature either expressly or by necessary implication.
Having
regard to the test of what constitutes discriminatory treatment as
articulated in section 56(4), I do not perceive that the applicants
daughters are being subjected
directly or indirectly to a condition, restriction or disability to
which other pupils are not subjected or that other pupils are being
accorded directly or indirectly a privilege or advantage which they
are not accorded. On the contrary, it seems to me that they are being
treated equally and in the same manner as other pupils. Indeed, it is
not inconceivable that even pupils of the Anglican faith might object
to mandatory chapel attendance for reasons unconnected with their
faith.
In
construing section 56 as a whole, it is necessary to emphasise that
discrimination is not defined by reference to the affected individual
or group standing alone. Rather, it is defined by reference to the
treatment that individual or group is subjected to as compared with
the treatment accorded to other persons or groups. Where there is no
such comparable differentiation, there can be no discrimination
proscribed by the Constitution.
In
the premises, I am satisfied that the applicants have failed to
demonstrate any plausible basis for invoking the right not to be
treated in a discriminatory manner in impugning the School's policy
of compulsory chapel attendance by all pupils.
Freedom
of Conscience and Religion
For
the purpose of addressing the merits of this aspect of the matter, it
is necessary to consider three separate but interrelated issues, to
wit:
the
nature and scope of the applicants freedom of religion as guaranteed
by section 60 of the Constitution.
whether
and the extent to which that freedom has been infringed by the
School.
if
so, whether any such infringement constitutes a permissible
limitation by virtue of subs (1), (2) or (3) of section 86 of the
Constitution.
Subsection
(1) of section 60 defines the right to freedom of conscience as
including, inter
alia,
freedom
of religion or belief and freedom to practise and propagate and give
expression to one's religion or belief, whether in public or in
private and whether alone or together with others. Subsection (3)
affirms the right of parents and guardians to determine, in
accordance with their beliefs, the moral and religious upbringing of
their minor children, provided they do not prejudice the
constitutional rights of their children, including their rights to
education, health, safety and welfare.
The
essence of the applicants religious credo, as appears from their
founding papers, is that there is no hell of fire and torment, that
places of worship should not contain any religious symbols, that
religions and faiths should not be mixed, and that there can only be
one truth from God which truth they hold. With specific reference to
religious symbols at the School, they object to the three crucifixes
atop, outside and inside the chapel, as well as the foundation stone
at the entrance of the chapel. These symbols, so they believe,
contravene the first Commandment against idolatry.
The
fundamental doctrinal beliefs and practices of Jehovah's Witnesses
may also be gleaned from the following article by John Gordon Melton
in the online Encyclopaedia
Britannica:
“Witnesses
hold a number of traditional Christian views but also many that are
unique to them. They affirm that God—Jehovah—is the most high.
Jesus Christ is God's agent, through whom sinful humans can be
reconciled to God. The Holy Spirit is the name of God's active
force in the world. Witnesses believe that they are living in the
last days, and they look forward to the imminent establishment of
God's kingdom on earth, which will be headed by Christ and jointly
administered by 144,000 human corulers (Revelation 7:4). Those who
acknowledge Jehovah in this life will become members of the
millennial kingdom; those who reject him will not go to hell but will
face total extinction.……..
The
Witnesses teachings stress strict separation from secular government.
Although they are generally law-abiding, believing that governments
are established by God to maintain peace and order, they refuse on
biblical grounds to observe certain laws. They do not salute the flag
of any nation, believing it an act of false worship; they refuse to
perform military service; and they do not participate in public
elections.……..
The
Witnesses distrust of contemporary institutions extends to other
religious denominations, from which they remain separate. They
disavow terms such as minister
and
church……..
Witnesses
also oppose certain medical practices that they believe violate
Scripture. In particular, they oppose blood transfusions, because of
the scriptural admonition against the consumption of blood (Leviticus
3:17).……..
In
the early years of the movement, members met in rented halls, but
under Rutherford the Witnesses began to purchase facilities that they
designated Kingdom Halls.…….. Each Kingdom Hall has an assigned
territory and each Witness a particular neighbourhood to canvass.……..
.”
The
following excerpt from Wikipedia,
as at 19 December 2015, elaborates Jehovah's Witnesses aversion to
the mixing of religions and their self-imposed injunction to remain
separate from the world at large:
“Jehovah's
Witnesses believe that the Bible condemns the mixing of religions, on
the basis that there can only be one truth from God, and therefore
reject interfaith and ecumenical movements. They believe that only
their religion represents true Christianity, and that other religions
fail to meet all the requirements set by God and will soon be
destroyed. Jehovah's Witnesses are taught that it is vital to remain
'separate from the world'. The Witnesses literature defines the
'world' as 'the mass of mankind apart from Jehovah's approved
servants and teach that it is morally contaminated and ruled by
Satan. Witnesses are taught that association with 'worldly'
people presents a 'danger' to their faith, and are instructed to
minimize social contact with non-members to better maintain their own
standards of morality.”
Adv.
Mafukidze
places
great reliance upon the case of Dzvova
v Minister of Education Sports & Culture and Others
2007
(2) ZLR 196 (S) for the broad submission that fundamental rights
must invariably be respected. In that case, the Supreme Court
affirmed the general proposition that the rules of the school in
question could not be applied to derogate from the constitutional
rights of its pupils, including their freedom of religion. However,
the ratio
decidendi
of
the Court was not predicated on any constitutional point but rather
on the principle that the power to make rules on school discipline
and to regulate the admission, punishment and expulsion of pupils
was reposed in the Minister of Education and was therefore outside
the remit of the school Head. Consequently, Dzvova's
case
does not, in my view, take the matter any further in resolving the
issues at hand. Moreover, it is also distinguishable from the
factual situation in
casu in
that the applicant in that case had not subscribed to any contract
of admission entitling the school to interfere with the enjoyment of
his child's freedom of conscience and religion.
Another
more recent case involving facts similar to those in Dzvova's
case
is
that of Kapasula
& Others v The Headmistress Hermann Gmeiner High School N.O. &
Others
Case
No. SC153/10. The applicants daughters in that matter were allegedly
excluded from enrolment to the first respondent's school because
their heads had not been shaven or trimmed for religious reasons.
This was in apparent contravention of the school's rules and
regulations stipulating that all pupils must always be smart with
short and neatly combed hair. The first respondent's opposition in
the High Court did not addresss the merits of the matter, but merely
relied on the preliminary objections that the application was not
urgent and that, in any case, the laws prohibiting discrimination
did not apply to the school since it was a private non-governmental
institution. On referral to the Supreme Court under section 24(2) of
the former Constitution, the Court was called upon to determine three
issues: whether the refusal to admit the children into the school on
the basis of their failure to shave or trim their hair was
discriminatory on the ground of creed in contravention of section
19(1) of the former Constitution; whether the decision of the school
to refuse admission into the school was done under the authority of
a law as envisaged in section 19(5) of the Constitution; and, if so,
whether such law was reasonably justifiable in a democratic society.
The applicants argued that the first respondent's actions were
clearly discriminatory and in contravention of section 19 of the
Constitution. Furthermore, the school's rules and regulations did
not constitute a law and were not made under the authority of any
law, i.e.
the
Education Act or its subsidiary regulations. The application before
the Supreme Court was not opposed by any of the respondents. In the
event, the Court granted an order simply prohibiting the school from
refusing the childrens admission into the school on the basis of the
length of their hair. There appear to have been no written reasons
for the judgment.
As
with the Dzvova
matter,
the Kapasula
case
is clearly distinguishable from the situation in
casu.
The school's rules and regulations were not authorised under any
law within the contemplation of section 19 of the Constitution and
were therefore patently ultra
vires.
More significantly, the applicants in both cases had not subscribed
to any binding contractual undertaking or commitment expressly and
unequivocally relinquishing their rights and the rights of their
children to abide by or enforce their religious beliefs and
convictions without qualification.
Adv.
de
Bourbon
submits,
in reliance on a dictum
drawn
from Wittmann
v Deutscher
Schulverein
Pretoria & Others 1998
(4) SA 423 (T) at 449, that “freedom of religion does not mean
freedom from religion”. In the instant case, so he argues, the
applicants daughters are not being persuaded to change their
religion or subscribe to other religious beliefs but are simply
being required to attend an activity that forms part of the School's
curriculum. Thus, the School cannot be said to have infringed any
aspect of the right to freedom of religion as enunciated by the
Canadian Supreme Court in R
v Big M Drug Mart Ltd
[1985]
1 SCR 295 at 336D-G, where it was stated that:
“The
essence of the concept of freedom of religion is the right to
entertain such religious beliefs as a person chooses, the right to
declare religious beliefs openly and without fear of hindrance or
reprisal, and the right to manifest religious belief by worship and
practice or by teaching and dissemination.”
In
Christian
Education South Africa v Minister of Education
2000
(4) SA 757 (CC) at para. 36, freedom of conscience and religion was
regarded as being integral to the dignity, growth and self-worth of
the individual:
“The
right to believe or not to believe, and to act or not to act
according to his or her beliefs or non-beliefs, is one of the key
ingredients of any person's dignity. Yet freedom of religion goes
beyond protecting the inviolability of the individual conscience. For
many believers, their relationship with God or creation is central to
all their activities. It concerns their capacity to relate in an
intensely meaningful fashion to their sense of themselves, their
community and their universe. For millions in all walks of life,
religion provides support and nurture and a framework for individual
and social stability and growth. Religious belief has the capacity to
awaken concepts of self-worth and human dignity which form the
cornerstone of human rights. It affects the believer's view of
society and founds the distinction between right and wrong. It
expresses itself in the affirmation and continuity of powerful
traditions that frequently have an ancient character transcending
historical epochs and national boundaries.”
The
importance of religious diversity in the educational sphere was
highlighted by Langa CJ in MEC
for Education: Kwazulu-Natal & Others v Pillay
2008
(1) SA 474 (CC) at para. 107 as follows:
“As
a general rule, the more learners feel free to express their
religions and cultures in school, the closer we will come to the
society envisaged in the Constitution. The display of religion and
culture in public is not a 'parade of horribles' but a pageant of
diversity which will enrich our schools and in turn our country.”
Counsel
for the applicants correctly notes that an essential component of the
right to freedom of religion is the absence of coercion or restraint
and that the freedom may be unjustly impaired by measures that
compel anyone to act or refrain from acting in a manner contrary to
one's religious beliefs. This absence of compulsion is emphasised
even in the Wittmann
case
(supra)
at 449D-G:
“Of
course the right of freedom of religion (in the case of religious
minorities) and the right to freedom of thought, belief and opinion
(in the case of atheists and agnostics) entails that attendance may
not be enforced. It must be voluntary. The right of non-attendance is
expressly recognised in sections 14(2) of the interim Constitution
and 15(2) of the Constitution. Attendance must be 'free and
voluntary'. There may be no coercion, neither by rules nor by
action on the part of the authorities.”
Similarly,
in the Pillay
case
(supra)
at paras. 63-64, the underlying values of human dignity, equality
and freedom are underscored in the pursuit of religious practices:
“A
necessary element of freedom and of dignity of any individual is an
'entitlement to respect for the unique set of ends that the
individual pursues'. One of those ends is the voluntary religious
and cultural practices in which we participate. That we choose
voluntarily rather than through a feeling of obligation only enhances
the significance of a practice to our autonomy, our identity and our
dignity.”
These
sentiments against coercive conduct are also sagaciously captured in
the Big
M Drug Mart case (supra)
at 337A-D:
“Freedom
in a broad sense embraces both the absence of coercion and
constraint, and the right to manifest beliefs and practices. Freedom
means that, subject to such limitations as are necessary to protect
public safety, order, health or morals or the fundamental rights and
freedoms of others, no one is to be forced to act in a way contrary
to his beliefs or his conscience.
What
may appear good and true to a majoritarian religious group, or to the
state acting at their behest, may not, for religious reasons, be
imposed upon citizens who take a contrary view. The Charter
safeguards
religious minorities from the threat of 'the tyranny of the
majority.'”
To
conclude on this aspect, there can be no doubt that the applicant's
children are entitled to hold and practise their religious beliefs,
whether within or without their homes, and within the precincts of
the School. It also cannot be doubted that the applicants are
entitled, in accordance with their own beliefs, to shape the moral
and religious upbringing of their children. The applicants aver that
to compel their daughters to attend chapel is contrary to their
religious convictions because it entails the mixing of religious
practices and attending church services in a building strewn with
religious symbols. Therefore, their daughters do not wish to be
present in the chapel.
Having
regard to the authorities cited above, I take the view that the
School's policy of compelling the applicants daughters to attend
chapel services constitutes a prima
facie infringement
of their religious beliefs. The practice and observance of their
faith demands that they exclude themselves from any place of worship
that contains any religious symbol, including the crucifix. It also
demands that they abstain from any rite or ritual that involves the
admixture of any religion other than their own. By being compelled to
enter the School chapel and attend the predominantly Anglican
services conducted therein, they are being called upon to renounce,
albeit temporarily, certain fundamental tenets of their faith that
are designed to enhance their peculiar sense of religious and
cultural identity as well as their dignity as self-professed
Jehovah's Witnesses. They can only be required to renounce those
tenets if they choose to do so freely and voluntarily or in
circumstances that are reasonable and justifiable having regard to
the public interest or the rights and freedoms of others.
Permissible
Limitation of Religious Freedom
The
critical question for determination in
casu
is
whether or not the compulsion to attend chapel imposed upon the
applicants daughters is constitutionally permissible in the
circumstances under consideration.
In
terms of section 86(2) of the Constitution, fundamental rights and
freedoms may be limited “only in terms of a law of general
application and to the extent that the limitation is fair,
reasonable, necessary and justifiable in a democratic society”.
In
this respect, Adv. de
Bourbon
argues
that the contract of admission signed by the applicants is the law
envisaged in section 86(2) and that the School is entitled to enforce
that contract accordingly.
Adv.
Mafukidze
appears
to implicitly accept this proposition by his lengthy written
submissions interrogating the contract and the School's conduct
under the criteria set out in section 86(2).
The
proposition and its implicit acceptance are clearly misplaced.
The
term “law” is defined in section 332 of the Constitution to mean
any provision of the Constitution, an Act of Parliament or a
statutory instrument, or any unwritten law in force in Zimbabwe,
including customary law.
A
private contractual stipulation is patently not a law as defined or
as generally understood, let alone a law of general application
within the meaning of section 86(2).
Accordingly,
I take the view that section 86(2) has no direct bearing on the
constitutionality or enforceability of the contract of admission and
does not take the matter any further in upholding or impeaching the
School's policy of compulsory chapel attendance.
As
regards the extent to which the freedom of religion may be limited,
Adv. Mafukidze
contends
that, although it may be permissible to limit the right to manifest
religious or other non-religious beliefs, the right to hold such
beliefs is to be considered as being inviolable.
I
am unable to discern any justification for this perceived distinction
either in section 60 or in section 86 of the Constitution.
In
terms of section 60(1), the freedom of thought, opinion, religion or
belief is accorded the same prominence and protection as the freedom
to practise, propagate and give expression to one's thought,
opinion, religion or belief. Both are guaranteed in the same breath
and without any express or implied differentiation as to the extent
of their entitlement to protection. Equally significantly, section
86(3) specifically enumerates those fundamental rights which “no
law may limit” and which “no person may violate”. These include
the rights to life, human dignity, not to be tortured, not to be
placed in slavery or servitude, to a fair trial, and to obtain an
order of habeas
corpus.
The right to freedom of conscience and religion is conspicuously
absent from this list of absolutely sacrosanct and inviolable rights.
The necessary implication is that freedom of religion is not
inviolate or non-derogable.
The
provision that I deem most apposite to the resolution of this matter,
and which I now turn to consider, is section 86(1) of the
Constitution. It declares that “fundamental rights and freedoms ….
must be exercised reasonably and with due regard for the rights and
freedoms of other persons”.
The
analysis of conflicting rights postulated by section 86(1) calls for
an essentially unitary approach. The question whether a given right
is being exercised reasonably is inextricably intertwined with the
question whether it is being exercised with due regard for the rights
and freedoms of others. What is required is the balancing of
actually or potentially antagonistic rights, having regard to the
nature of those rights, the manner in and the extent to which they
impinge upon one another, and the circumstances in which they have
been or are to be exercised.
It
is trite that a contract concluded in contravention of the written or
unwritten law, or one that is contrary to public policy, is
susceptible to being struck down and rendered of no force or effect.
The doctrine of sanctity of contracts is obviously subject to
constitutional limits. As was observed in Bredenkamp
and Others v Standard Bank of South Africa Ltd
2010
(4) SA 468 (SCA) at para. 39, every contract or institutional rule
must pass constitutional muster. Again, in Barkhuizen
v Napier
2007
(5) SA 323 (CC) at para. 15, it was emphasised that:
“All
law, including the common law of contract, is now subject to
constitutional control. The validity of all laws depends on their
consistency with the provisions of the Constitution and the values
that underlie our Constitution. The application of the principle
pacta
sunt servanda
is,
therefore, subject to constitutional control.”
Adv.
Mafukidze
submits
that the School's contract of admission contains unlawful and
onerous terms and conditions targeted against members of different
faiths. They are contrary to public policy and therefore cannot
qualify as rules capable of enforcement.
Adv.
de
Bourbon
retorts
that, although the School's assemblies in chapel carry religious
overtones, no pupil is obliged to participate in any religious
activity. All the pupils are simply required to attend and be
respectful. No one is victimised for not singing or praying. To this
extent, the School is entitled to expect conformity and the
applicants are equally entitled to remove their daughters to a
school that does not offend their religious principles. This accords
with the rights of establishment and maintenance explicitly preserved
and conferred upon independent educational institutions by section
75(2) of the Constitution.
It
is common cause that the religious status of the applicants children
was known from the outset and that the previous policy of the School
was one of religious tolerance and accommodation. In this respect, I
am unable to accept the submission by Adv. de
Bourbon
that
the applicants acted fraudulently in signing the contract of
admission simply to gain the admission of their daughters into the
School. This is because the previous policy was highlighted in the
School's website which, although out-dated, appears to have been
relied upon by the applicants. In this context, therefore, it cannot
be said that their daughters refusal to attend chapel is
unreasonable.
In
any event, there is nothing in the opposing papers to show that the
objective of collegiality that the Headmistress wishes to inculcate
in the pupils was not previously attained. There is no evidence that
the exemption from chapel attendance that was previously granted has
negatively impacted on the collegiality or discipline of the
applicants daughters or the other pupils. Nor is there anything to
indicate that compulsory collective chapel attendance is the most
appropriate vehicle to entrench collegiality.
This
objective might be better achieved through regular attendance at
social or sporting events or when all the pupils are gathered
together in the dining hall, as happens at the School during the
daily lunch break.
As
Adv. Mafukidze
correctly
submits, coercion as opposed to persuasion does not necessarily
build collegiality. On the contrary, to forcibly conjoin persons of
different faiths might serve to undermine the dignity of all
concerned, the minority as well as the majority. As I have already
noted, freedom of conscience and human dignity are inseparably linked
and the denial of the former entails the denial of the latter.
As
against the foregoing, it is not in dispute that the applicants were
fully aware from the time that they signed the admission forms that
their daughters had been accepted as pupils on the following terms
and conditions: that the School's rules and regulations, as amended
from time to time, would be binding and had to be observed; that the
School's founding Christian principles would entail adherence to
its rules on chapel attendance; that no exemption from the
curriculum would be considered on religious grounds; and that any
latitude concerning chapel attendance was at the sole discretion of
the School Head, whose decision was final and binding.
Thus,
the applicants were cognisant of the fact that any previous latitude
or exemption granted in relation to chapel attendance was subject to
being reversed and that they and their daughters would be obliged to
comply with any such change in policy.
In
short, there can be no doubt that they willingly consented to the
implementation and enforcement of the School's rules and
regulations, even if they were altered after the admission of their
daughters into the School.
In
the Wittmann
case (supra),
the facts of which involved the enforcement of an enrolment contract
in circumstances which are are very similar to those herein, Van
Dijkhorst J, at 454- 455, opined as follows in relation to parochial
community schools:
“In
respect of these educational institutions the fundamental freedom of
religion of 'outsiders' is limited to the freedom of non-joinder.
Outsiders cannot join on their own terms and once they have joined
cannot impose their own terms.
This
indicates that the waiver of the freedom of religion (for the limited
duration of one's membership and within the limits of the
institution's constitution) is not contrary to the provisions of
the Constitution in the case of private educational institutions.
Waiver per
se
of
that freedom is therefore not unconstitutional.”
I
note that this decision was premised on specific provisions of the
South African Constitution which are not identical to the
corresponding provisions in our Constitution and that, as far as I
am aware, it has not been followed or applied by the Constitutional
Court of South Africa.
I
also note, with the utmost respect, that the sentiments expressed by
the learned judge might be criticised as being somewhat exclusivist,
having been pronounced in the peculiar post- apartheid milieu of that
country. Nevertheless, I take them to be fairly instructive in the
broader context of delineating the outer contours of religious
freedom.
Another
case of persuasive value is the decision of the European Court of
Human Rights, apropos the European Convention on Human Rights, in
Valsamis
v Greece
[1996]
24 EHRR 294, arising from facts which are not dissimilar to those in
casu.
The
applicants in that case were Jehovah's Witnesses. Pacifism was a
fundamental tenet of their religion which forbade any conduct or
practice associated with war or violence, even indirectly. Following
a written request, their daughter was exempted from attendance at
religious education lessons and Orthodox Mass. However, in common
with other pupils at her school, she was asked to take part in the
celebration of the National Day, a day when the outbreak of war
between Greece and Fascist Italy was commemorated with school and
military parades. She requested the headmaster that she be excused
from the celebration on religious grounds, in particular, on the
basis of her pacifist convictions. Her request was refused but she
nevertheless did not participate in the school parade. She was
punished for her failure to attend with one day's suspension from
school, a decision taken by the headmaster in accordance with a
circular issued by the Ministry of Education and Religious Affairs.
She
and her parents argued that they were the victims of a breach of the
right to education under Article 2 of Protocol No.1, which requires
the State to respect the right of parents to ensure that the
education and teaching received by their children is “in conformity
with their own religious and philosophical convictions”. They also
complained that their “right to freedom of thought, conscience and
religion” guaranteed by Article 9 of the Convention had been
breached. Their complaints in relation to these two provisions were
dismissed by a majority decision of seven votes to two.
The
dissenting judges took a robust view of the rights allegedly
infringed. In their opinion, Mr and Mrs Valsamis's perception of
the symbolism of the school parade and its religious and
philosophical connotations had to be accepted because it was not
obviously unfounded and unreasonable. Similarly, Miss Valsamis's
statement that the parade she did not participate in had a character
and symbolism that were clearly contrary to her religious beliefs
also had to be accepted and there was no basis for seeing her
participation in this parade as necessary in a democratic society.
The
minority accordingly found that both Article 2 of Protocol No.1 and
Article 9 of the Convention had been violated.
As
regards the right to education and its corollary of parental
convictions, the majority judges were of the opinion, at paras.
31-33, that:
“Such
commemorations of national events serve, in their way, both pacifist
objectives and the national interest. The presence of military
representatives at some of the parades which take place in Greece on
the day in question does not in itself alter the nature of the
parades.
Furthermore,
the obligation on the pupil does not deprive her parents of their
right 'to enlighten and advise their children, to exercise with
regard to their children natural parental functions as educators, or
to guide their children on a path in line with the parents own
religious or philosophical convictions'. ….
It
is not for the Court to rule on the expediency of other educational
methods which, in the applicants view, would be better suited to the
aim of perpetuating historical memory among the younger generation.….
In
conclusion, there has not been a breach of Article 2 of Protocol No.1
(P1-2).”
On
the freedom of thought, conscience and religion, the majority adopted
the earlier decision of the Commission and opined, at paras. 36-38:
“The
Commission considered that Article 9 (art. 9) did not confer a right
to exemption from disciplinary rules which applied generally and in a
neutral manner and that in the instant case there had been no
interference with the applicant's right to freedom to manifest her
religion or belief.
The
Court notes at the outset that Miss Valsamis was exempted from
religious education and the Orthodox Mass, as she had requested on
the grounds of her own religious beliefs. It has already held, in
paragraphs 31-33 above, that the obligation to take part in the
school parade was not such as to offend her parents religious
convictions. The impugned measure therefore did not amount to an
interference with her right to freedom of religion either.….
There
has consequently not been a breach of Article 9 of the Convention
(art. 9)”.
Disposition
Before
balancing the respective rights and freedoms of the parties, it is
necessary to consider the waiver of constitutionally entrenched
rights.
Adv.
Mafukidze
argues
that it is possible to waive certain rights, depending upon the right
in question, for example, the right to trade which can be subjected
to restraint by agreement. However, the right to entertain and
manifest religious beliefs cannot be waived because it is
characterised by the absence of compulsion or coercion, including
indirect control. Accordingly, clauses 4 and 5 of the School's
admission form must be regarded as being contra
bonos mores
and
therefore unlawful.
Adv.
de
Bourbon
accepts
that public policy enables the scrutiny of private contracts in order
to ensure their constitutionality. Nevertheless, it is possible to
contractually waive one's religious precepts in order to achieve a
specific social or material purpose, as the applicants have done by
signing the contentious form of admission.
I
am inclined to agree.
As
I have indicated earlier, I do not perceive the right to freedom of
religion as being absolute or non-derogable. On that basis, I can
think of no objection to its being voluntarily waived in
circumstances where such waiver does not entail the fundamental
eradication of one's religious or conscientious beliefs.
The
applicants cannot assert that their faith condemns the mixing of
religious beliefs and practices and at the same time enrol their
daughters at a school with an Anglican ethos and practices.
The
contract of admission that they signed categorically states that any
latitude in chapel attendance granted to the pupils would not
invariably exempt their attendance in future and that the decision
of the Head in that regard would be final. In effect, the applicants
chose to bend the tenets of their faith to a limit determined by
themselves so as to gain admission to the School for their
daughters. Once that limit has been exceeded, they now invoke the
right to religious freedom in order to demand that the School should
conform to their religious dictates.
In
other words, the applicants and their daughters are prepared to
remain “separate from a contaminated world” only to the extent
that they deem it expedient to do so. To use a well- worn adage, they
cannot approbate and simultaneously reprobate the School and its
avowed ethos.
As
I have already observed, freedom of religion is not an absolute right
enforceable erga
omnes,
at all times and in every circumstance. It cannot override and must
conform with the law of the land to the extent that such law is
reasonably justifiable in a democratic society. Moreover, its
exercise cannot justify interference with the rights of others or
countenance any harm to public interests. Thus, in the instant case,
it is necessary to balance the religious freedom of the applicants
and their daughters within their chosen educational environment as
against the rights and interests of the School and its institutional
values as propounded by its founders.
The
ethical foundation of freedom of conscience, as guaranteed by section
19 of the former Constitution, was lucidly expounded by Gubbay CJ in
In
re Chikweche
1995
(1) ZLR 235 (SC) at 242-243:
“….
I am of the view that the reference in section 19(1) to freedom of
conscience is intended to encompass and protect systems of belief
which are not centred on a deity or religiously motivated, but are
founded on personal morality.”
Having
regard to this ethical dimension, it seems to me that every religion,
be it Judaeo- Christian, Muslim, Buddhist or Hindu, is essentially
rooted in the precepts of morality. The forms of moral expression
and observance adopted by each religion may vary according to time,
place, culture and tradition. But the transcendent values that
animate every religion are universal. They are embedded in the
quintessential humanity of its protagonists. Apart from each
individual's personal relationship with his or her own deity, there
is the collective bond of human commonality that informs and guides
his or her relationship with others. In a libertarian society, what
this bond demands is mutual respect and tolerance between
individuals, social groups and communities, with the ultimate
objective of attaining a truly pluralistic polity.
Reverting
to the question at hand, what is envisaged by section 86(1) of the
Constitution is precisely that mutuality of rights and freedoms, to
be enjoyed and exercised in a manner that is reasonably justifiable
in a democratic society. In the specific context of freedom of
religion, what this entails is that the scope and extent of one's
spiritual rights must be measured within the temporal environment in
which they operate.
The
position of the applicants and their daughters in
casu
is
no different.
They
have willingly chosen to join and participate in the communal ethos
of the School and, furthermore, to abide by whatever its broader
curriculum implies. The principle of mutual respect and tolerance
requires that they accommodate the institutional rights and interests
of the School in pursuing its perceived objectives, so long as those
objectives are not pursued unreasonably and, equally importantly, so
long as they do not radically undermine the religious beliefs and
convictions of any of its pupils. In other words, the School's
policy should not transmute into some tyranny of the majority,
imposed without due regard for the rights and sensibilities of the
minority.
From
a purely neutral and secular standpoint, I do not think that
attendance in chapel for short stints three times a week would
necessarily negate or deracinate the fundamental beliefs of the
applicants daughters.
They
are not being called upon to engage in prayer or participate in the
Anglican rituals conducted in chapel. They are simply required to
attend chapel and remain dispassionately respectful during its
proceedings, not unlike the participants at an athletic event or
diplomatic function where everyone present is expected to stand in
silence whenever the national anthem of any given country is played.
Indeed, it is perfectly possible, if they are prepared to open their
hearts and minds in the true spirit of religious tolerance, that they
might even derive some benefit from quietly observing the rites and
rituals of another religion, without having to surrender their own
convictions and succumb to the specific beliefs of that religion.
In
the event, after considerable vacillation and not without some
reservation, I have come to the conclusion, on the particular facts
of this case, that the applicants are not entitled to the
declaratory and consequential relief that they crave.
What
this means is that the School is entitled to enforce its policy of
compulsory chapel attendance in respect of the applicants daughters.
However,
in the event that they refuse to abide by this policy, they should
not be removed from or required to leave the School, firstly, unless
the School takes the fully considered view that it is entirely
necessary to do so and, secondly, until they are afforded a
reasonable period of time to select and relocate to another school,
having regard to their individual educational needs and
circumstances.
As
regards costs, I am disinclined to apply the normal rule that costs
should follow the event and be awarded to the successful party.
Indeed, the usual approach in constitutional matters is not to award
costs unless the conduct of a party warrants such an order. The
salient questions raised in this matter, although not entirely
novel, were particularly complex and difficult to resolve. The
unusual facts of the case merited comprehensive constitutional
deliberation. I am also alive to the fact that this application was
only launched in reaction to the School's policy on chapel
attendance having been altered after the applicants daughters were
admitted to the School.
In
the circumstances, it is just and equitable that each party should
bear its own costs.
In
the result, it is ordered as follows:
The
application be and is hereby dismissed with no order as to costs.
In
the event that the first and second respondents take the decision to
expel the applicants daughters from the School, they shall be
afforded a reasonable period of time to select and relocate to
another school.
CHIDYAUSIKU
CJ: I
agree
MALABA
DCJ: I
agree
ZIYAMBI
JCC: I
agree
GWAUNZA
JCC: I
agree
GARWE
JCC: I
agree
GOWORA
JCC: I
agree
HLATSHWAYO
JCC: I
agree
GUVAVA
JCC: I
agree
Wintertons,
applicants
legal practitioners
Atherstone
& Cook,
1st
and
2nd
respondents
legal practitioners
Civil
Division of the Attorney-General's Office,
2nd
and
3rd
respondents
legal practitioners