Sonia Sodha

How assisted dying changed my mind on religion

Credit: Getty images

A couple of weeks ago, a friend voiced a sentiment that I wasn’t expecting. ‘I think your values are quite Christian, Sonia.’ What I found even more surprising was my own reaction to it. A year ago, I’d have felt patronised, maybe even a little insulted. Instead, I took it as a compliment.

Growing up the daughter of East African Asian immigrants of different faiths – my father an atheistic Gujarati Hindu, my mother a lapsed Punjabi Sikh – faith wasn’t a strong feature of my childhood. As a young child, I’d quite often go to the gurdwara with my maternal grandparents, who were religious. I went to a school with an explicitly Christian ethos. But as a teenager I saw a belief in God as akin to a belief in Father Christmas. My attitude didn’t evolve much beyond that in my 20s and 30s: how could anyone believe in something so irrational and borderline ridiculous?

Too many secular liberals remain stuck in the Father Christmas view of faith I’m glad to have left behind

Two things have shifted my perspective in recent months.

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