Catholic Church challenging Quebec MAID law in court on religious freedom grounds
MONTREAL — A Quebec law requiring all palliative care homes to offer medical assistance in dying violates religious freedom and should be declared unconstitutional, says a legal challenge filed by the office of the Roman Catholic Archbishop of Montreal.
A palliative care home in Montreal affiliated with the Catholic Church should not be required to administer medically assisted deaths, Archbishop Christian Lépine said in an interview Tuesday.
“It’s about freedom of conscience,” Lépine said.
The requirement that palliative care homes offer medical assistance in dying — known as MAID — came into effect in early December. The lawsuit, filed in Quebec Superior Court and dated Friday, wants that part of Quebec’s end-of-life law to be struck down and for the church’s care centre to be immediately exempt from it until the case is heard on its merits.

