Journal of Catholic Legal Studies

Religious Liberty and Protections in Europe

By: Richard Defeis

Europe, is becoming increasingly secular.  While religious belief remains sacrosanct, religious liberty, or the freedom to express religious belief, is devalued.  The failure of the European Court of Human Rights (“ECHR”) to more sensitively address infringement of religious liberty is symptomatic of this increasing secularization of Europe.  For example, in reviewing claims of infringement of religious liberty under Article 9 of the European Convention on Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms (“ECHRFF”), the Court has generally allowed each state a wide margin of appreciation when issues of religion are involved and the role of national decision-making bodies are given special importance.  Its Grand Chamber decision Leyla Şahin v. Turkey, the ECHR found the principle of secularism, as reflected in the state restriction on the wearing of the headscarf by a university medical student, to be consistent with values underpinning the European Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms (“ECPHRFF”), in harmony with the rule of law and respect for human rights, and may be necessary to protect a democratic system.

In his book Can God and Caesar Coexist?, Fr. Robert F. Drinan is critical of decisions of the ECHR for its lack of deference to the free exercise claims of petitioners to the Court.  As a partial answer, he questions whether an international mechanism or forum could better resolve claims of violations of religious liberty.  However, it is questionable whether such a mechanism is the optimum method to resolve disputes concerning religious liberty in Europe.  The principle of subsidiarity, first enunciated in papal encyclicals reflects national cultures and values and is counter to hierarchical decision-making.  While the Court has repeatedly asserted that it is the ultimate arbiter of guarantees in the ECHRFF, perhaps it is this flexibility that has made the Court the most effective Court for the protection of human rights. 

This article examines the three systems of church-state relations in Europe; that of an established religion, a cooperative relationship between Church and State, and the secular state.  It then examines whether or not any of these models are more or less favorable to religious freedom in practice in Europe in two contexts: the regulation of cults or sects and the prohibition on public displays of religious symbols.  The article questions whether an international tribunal other than the ECHR could be more effective in resolving infringement of religious liberty issues and concludes that an international forum for claims of infringement of religious liberty would run counter to deeply established traditions in Europe such as the principle of subsidiarity.