New secularism law is looming over Way of the Cross marches on Good Friday in Quebec
MONTREAL — Christians across Quebec are about to face a new legal landscape on Good Friday, only a day after the provincial legislature adopted a law that could crack down on their annual Way of the Cross processions.
In Montreal, several hundred people joined Archbishop Christian Lépine in a march of “prayer, reflection and silence” that wound its way through the streets behind a large crucifix, stopping at several historic churches in a commemoration of Jesus’s journey to the cross.
But the Easter weekend tradition will likely become harder to organize in future years, now that the province has passed a law to ban public prayer.
The Quebec government adopted legislation on Thursday, extending a ban on wearing religious symbols in public workplaces to daycare workers, prohibiting prayer rooms in public institutions, and banning public prayer without explicit municipal consent.