By KATHERINE HARDING
Toronto Globe and Mail
Friday, May 18, 2007
A Hutterite community in Alberta that believes willfully being photographed is a sin has won the legal right to have a driver's licence without a picture.
The Alberta Court of Appeal this week upheld a lower court decision from last year that the provincial regulation requiring photographs on driver's licences violated the Hutterian Brethren of Wilson Colony's religious freedoms guaranteed under the Charter of Rights and Freedoms.
"This is good news. Not being photographed is one of the Ten Commandments," said John Wurz, the head of the Wilson Hutterite colony, which belongs to the brethren that launched the court challenge.
About 30,000 Hutterites live in Canada, and many believe that the Second Commandment, which forbids graven images, prohibits them from willfully having their picture taken. Some even believe it is a sin for that photograph to be seen by another person.
Despite Thursday's legal triumph, Wurz is already concerned that a U.S. requirement for all Canadian citizens to have passports by the end of 2008 to cross the border will land them in the courts again. "It's getting harder to protect our rights with every law they make," he said, adding that it is already difficult for Hutterites to make border crossings with their current identification papers, which don't include photos.
Other provinces with large Hutterite populations, such as Manitoba and Saskatchewan, allow driver's licences without photos for religious reasons.
For several years, Alberta also allowed photo exemptions on religious grounds, but the government changed the rules in 2003, citing security and identify-theft concerns. When the rules changed, 453 sanctioned photo-free Alberta licenses were taken out of circulation, with more then half belonging to members of the Hutterites of Wilson Colony.
While the Hutterite community in southern Alberta fought the legal case, the government issued them special interim driver's licences that don't require photographs. Eighty such licences have been issued, but they are not considered a legal form of identification and contain several security features, including a seal.
Madam Justice Carole Conrad wrote that driving is important to the Hutterites' communal way of life, and the lack of photo-free licenses violated their Charter rights.
This issue of religious rights versus the state's need to identify its citizens emerged in Quebec during the provincial election earlier this year. Just days before the vote, the chief electoral officer reversed his decision to allow Muslim women to vote without lifting their veils to identify themselves. The decision affected only a small number of voters, but sparked a major debate on the topic of accommodating religious minorities.
Most of Canada's Hutterites live in more than 300 communal colonies dotted across the four Western provinces. Computers, fax machines, televisions and newspapers are frowned upon, but allowed at more progressive colonies.
Throughout the centuries, members of the religious group --which traces its beginnings to the Anabaptists, a radical Protestant sect that evolved in Europe in the 1520s -- have been persecuted because of their beliefs in almost every country they moved to, except Canada. Many Hutterites fled here during the First World War after the U.S. government tried to force their members, who are staunch pacifists, to fight in Europe.
(Distributed by Scripps Howard News Service, www.scrippsnews.com.)




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HUTTERITES
WHAT RELIGION?THEY ARE A CULT!BESIDES THE QUOTE FROM THE OLD TESTAMENTTHAT THEY USE IS FULL OF HOLES! THERE WERE NO CAMERAS IN THE DAYS OF THE OLD TESTAMENT!! IS IT ALSO A SIN FOR THE HUTTERITES TO GO INTO A FARM MACHINERY DEALER AND LOOK AT A PAMPHLET ADVERTISING THE LATEST COMBINE??AND WORSE OF ALL--THE HUTTERITES SHOULD NOT BE LOOKING AT THE PICTURE OF QUEEN ELIZABETH, PRIME MINISTERLAURIER, ETC ON OUR CANADIAN CURRENCY!!SO, IF THIS IS ARULE OF THE OLD TESTAMENT, THAT MEANS NO ART OF ANY KIND, AND THEREFORE IT IS A SIN TO USE ANYTHING WITH ARTWORK ON IT! --THEN, WHAT ABOUT THE SECURITY CAMERAS AT BANK MACHINES, BANKS AND STORES WHERE IS IS PERFECTLY ACCEPTABLE FOR HUTTERITES TO ENTER?? STRANGE HOW SOME RELIGIOUS BELIEFS ARE ALTERED WHEN IT IS SUITABLE.GOOD LUCK WITH UNCLE SAM!!!
this sucks
i thin this is rediculous they should have to have there picture on there liscence a 6 year old could be driving with a 50 year olds licence
6 year old Hutterites with 50 year old licences
Having visited many Hutterite colonies in my work over the years, I have noted that most 6 year old Hutterites could probably drive better than most 50 year olds who aren't of this way of life. I can also guarantee that given even their limited and basic education in English, they can damn well write better than you. What in hell is your problem?
No need to shout Terri
Very interesting comment Terri, but no need to shout my friend...
This is obviously a very complicated issue as all things with religion attached to them are.
I used to be a Hutterite and have since left the community and I can safely tell you that not all Hutterites share the same belief about this DL picture controversy. In fact the branch I come from "Lehrerleut Hutterites" all have pictures on their DL's.
Just FYI
Peace and have a great day
Jerry
Link Text HutteriteBlog.com
Hutterites- A cult?
A cult that survives 500 years? I don't think so. If Hutterites are a 'cult' then so are the Methodists, Presbyterians and especially the Catholics. Try telling them that. You are blaming them for their interpretation of scripture that know more about than you ever will. Hutterites believe they live communally to escape the sins of this world. A photo of a combine is not a problem for them. Or for many even photos of themselves but some choose to not wish this to happen.
I worry more about why the frigging government needs to know so damn much in the first place. Dear old 'freedom for all' America chased these people out with their insistance on having a major war every few months (except during the Second World War when they chose to just let things get going good first) and Canada welcomed them. Happily, they are very good citizens and largely good people. I know, I have met dozens of them.