Beyond Tolerance: Active Allyship in Religious Diversity
21 May, 2025, Amy Clarke
“Miss it’s so cool that our school community is anti-racist, anti-sexist, anti-everything really … I mean anti everything bad of course!! ”
I reflect on these words with profound appreciation, noting a recent conversation during a pupil voice feedback session in my school in the North-East. This dialogue exemplifies the significant progress our school community has made, particularly in how eloquently our pupils now articulate our shared values and institutional identity.
In today’s diverse society being an ally to those with differing religious and non-religious worldviews requires more than just passive acceptance. As research such as that of Trevor Cooling* shows, simply bringing people together without intentional engagement doesn’t automatically destroy stereotypes or develop friendly attitudes.
True allyship in the context of religious and worldview differences requires several key principles and RE is a platform that can be used to promote this. It is a respectful window into them becoming advocates.
A well designed and balanced RE curriculum can promote modelled respectfulness, diversity of opinion. and how to disagree respectfully.
This all leads into developing pupils’ ‘personal” knowledge’.
Key principles in promoting active ally-ship
- Create Equal Space
- Ensure everyone has equal value in conversations and interactions
- Foster an environment where all perspectives can be shared safely and respectfully
- Promote Meaningful Dialogue
- Move beyond superficial conversations to explore authentic experiences
- Listen to diverse voices and encourage honest discussions about differences
When the RE platform is used well, the children themselves can them become advocates for each other. One effective approach is to actively engage with different interpretations and perspectives within religious traditions. For example, inviting people from different branches of the same faith tradition to share their unique viewpoints can help break down stereotypical portrayals and reveal the rich complexity of religious experience.
Most importantly, as the religion and worldviews approach promotes, we need to remember that being an ally starts with people, not abstract concepts. Each person’s worldview is shaped by their time, place, language, and cultural context. By approaching allyship through this human-centred lens, we can better understand and support those whose beliefs and practices differ from our own.
Children can become a beacon of hope by being an authentic voice in representing their own personal worldviews as well as engaging with and understanding the diverse views of others. Our future will be shaped by the young people we teach today therefore developing a culture of respect and an open dialogue of curiosity rather than hostility is essential. By doing this we will continue as adults to be astounded by our young people’s allyship and respect of others, in a world that can feed on exploiting extremes.
* Trevor Cooling (2025) Knowledge in a religion and worldviews approach in English schools, British Journal of Religious Education, 47:2, 130-139, DOI: 10.1080/01416200.2024.2304693
https://doi.org/10.1080/01416200.2024.2304693