Skip to content
Search

Latest Stories

'We need to foster religious inclusivity all year round'

“While religion is one of the protected characteristics in the UK's Equality Act, it receives relatively little attention.”

'We need to foster religious inclusivity all year round'

World Religion Day shines an important light on the topic of religious equality, encouraging peace and understanding between different religious groups. However, we still have much more to do to ensure open and empathetic discussion around religion happens all year round.

This is especially apparent in the workplace, with our recent ‘Religion at work’ research revealing that many people do not feel able to express their faith openly at work.


A third of UK-based Hindu employees, for example, said they do not feel comfortable discussing religious festivals at work.

Meanwhile, almost half of Christian employees believe their organisation could do more to make employees feel comfortable wearing religious symbols. One Christian employee mentioned that ‘the vast majority of the staff have ridiculed religion so publicly and so viciously’ in their workplace.

While religion is one of the protected characteristics in the UK’s Equality Act, it receives relatively little attention. We need to be more aware of the ways we may be making some people feel, especially when it comes to expressing a significant part of their identity at work.

Successful, long-term change will be dependent on organisations building inclusive cultures, where valuing differences and supporting everyone, no matter their belief, is the norm. Leaders need to take accountability, foster inclusive behaviours, and set an example when it comes to challenging stereotypical attitudes.

The issues discussed won’t disappear once World Religion Day has passed, and leaders need to ensure that supportive, constructive and empathetic conversations are happening all year round.

Binna Kandola is business psychologist, senior partner and co-founder of Pearn Kandola

More For You

Birmingham city flooded and filthy

Birmingham’s basic services are collapsing as council mismanagement leaves city flooded and filthy

West Midlands Fire Service

Birmingham’s basic services are collapsing as council mismanagement leaves city flooded and filthy

I was driving into Birmingham last week during the downpour. Just when you thought Birmingham couldn’t slide any further, the weather exposed the rot even more brutally.

The flooding wasn’t biblical rainfall, a once-in-a-century storm. It was standard British rain - heavy, yes, but nothing the city’s drainage system shouldn’t comfortably handle. Yet its streets were flooded like the River Rea had suddenly burst its banks. Cars ploughed through knee-deep water. Pavements vanished under fast-flowing streams. Residents in Kings Heath, Yardley and Erdington filmed their roads turning into temporary lakes in real time.

And why? Because the gullies were blocked. Because drains hadn’t been cleared. Because basic street maintenance - one of the first duties of a functioning council - had been sacrificed on the altar of financial meltdown created by years of incompetence and, frankly, corruption.

The city’s councillors should all hand their heads in shame with their diabolical mismanagement.

When a council is too broke to clean drains, too disorganised to collect rubbish, and too preoccupied with internal crises to serve its own citizens, that’s not austerity.

Birmingham city flooded and filthy Birmingham’s basic services are collapsing as council mismanagement leaves city flooded and filthy West Midlands Fire Service

Keep ReadingShow less