Documents
in Quebec History
Last
revised: 23 August 2000 | Les
Québécois, le clergé catholique et l'affaire des écoles du Manitoba / Quebecers,
the Catholic Clergy and the Manitoba School Question, 1890-1916
Petition
of the Liberal Senators and Members of Parliament To Pope Leo XIII [Note
from the editor: This petition, drawn in October 1896, was signed by 43 Liberal
senators and Members of Parliament [according to Skelton, p. 37, the number who
signed was 45; this number is confirmed by L. Groulx in his L'enseignement
français au Canada. II. Les écoles des minorités, Montréal, Granger, 1933,
271p., p. 125. Yet Rumilly, who supplies the list of the names of those who signed,
only provides 43 names; see the same document in French at the site] from Quebec
who wishes to protest the intervention of the clergy in the political affairs
of Canada. It was sent to Gustave Drolet and Jean-Baptiste Proulx who were in
Rome to represent their interests in the fall of 1896. It should be noted that
Henri Bourassa, well-known for his ultramontane leanings, was among those who
signed the petition.] T0 HIS HOLINESS
LEO XIII: Most Holy Father, - We, the
undersigned, members of the Senate and members of the House of Commons of Canada,
and representing therein the Liberal party, present ourselves before your Holiness
as respectful and devoted children of Holy Church, to complain of the existence
of a state of things which, if allowed to continue, might be extremely dangerous
to the constitutional liberties of this country, as well as to the interests of
the Church itself. Your Holiness has
already been made aware of the conduct and attitude of certain prelates and of
certain members of the secular clergy who, during the general elections in this
country; in the month of June last, intervened in a violent manner in restraint
of electoral freedom, taking sides openly for the Conservative party against the
Liberal party, and going so far as to declare guilty of grievous sin those of
the electors who would vote for the candidates of the Liberal party. Sincerely
attached to the institutions of our country, which insure to us Catholics the
most complete liberty, we respectfully represent to your Holiness that these democratic
institutions under which we live and for which your Holiness has many times expressed
sentiments of admiration and confidence, can only exist under perfect electoral
freedom. Far be it from us to refuse
to the clergy the plenitude of civil and political rights. The priest is a citizen,
and we would not, for a single instant, deprive him of the right of expressing
his opinion on any matter submitted to the electorate; but when the exercise of
that right develops into violence, and when that violence, in the name of religion,
goes to the extent of making a grievous sin out of a purely political act, there
is an abuse of authority of which the consequences cannot but be fatal, not only
to constitutional liberty, but to religion itself. If,
in a country such as ours, with a population consisting of persons of various
creeds and wherein the Protestant denominations are in the majority, Catholics
did not enjoy, in all matters relating to legislation, the same political freedom
as their Protestant fellow-countrymen, they would ipso facto be placed
in a position of inferiority, which would prevent them from taking the legitimate
part which they are entitled to take in the government of the country, with the
possibility, moreover, of conflicts between the various groups of the population
which history shows to be very fraught with danger. Then
again, an active and violent intervention of the clergy in the domain of political
questions submitted to the people must, of necessity, produce against the great
mass of the Catholic population a degree of irritation manifestly prejudicial
to that respect which religion and its ministers should ever inspire and command. Some
twenty years ago, his Holiness Pius the IX, your illustrious and lamented predecessor,
on the Pontifical Throne, acting through the Sacred Congregation of the Propaganda,
deemed it his duty to put a stop to certain abuses of a similar character, and
forbade the intervention of the clergy in politics. This prohibition was generally
respected so long as his Eminence Cardinal Taschereau was able to guide the Church
in Canada, but since old age and infirmities have paralyzed his guiding hand,
the abuses to which your illustrious predecessor had put a stop, have begun again,
and threaten once more to create trouble among us and to comprowise, not only
Catholic interests in this country, but the peace and harmony which should exist
between the various elements of our population. Again
affirming our absolute devotion to the faith of our fathers and to the Church
of which you are the Supreme Head; affirming our respect and attachment for the
person of your Holiness, our attachment to the interests of our country and to
the Crown of Great Britain, its aegis and protector, we beg that your Holiness
will renew in our behalf the most wise prescriptions and prohibitions of your
predecessor; protect the consciences of the Catholic electors, and thus secure
peace in our country by the union of religion and liberty, a union which your
Holiness has many times extolled in those immortal encyclicals whose precious
teachings we desire in all things to follow; and, lastly, grant to the children
of the Church, now addressing your Holiness, the Apostolic Benediction. Source
: Oscar Douglas Skelton, Life and Letters of Wilfrid Laurier. Vol. 2, Toronto,
Oxford University Press, 1921, 576p., pp. 37-38. ©
2000 Claude Bélanger, Marianopolis College |