Bahrain Protests France's Ban on Muslim Scarves

by Anai Rhoads - Veriana Media Sunday, Dec. 28, 2003 at 8:16 PM

Women gathered in protest outside of the French embassy in the Gulf Arab state of Bahrain Thursday, urging an end to Chirac's plans to remove the Hijab from France's state schools.

Bahrain Protests France's Ban on Muslim Scarves

25 December 2003

by Anai Rhoads
Veriana Media

At the risk of France no longer being called a free state, French President Jacques Chirac asked the parliament to ban Hijabs (Muslim headscarves) from being worn in schools. Chirac asked that the law be reviewed and passed before September 2004, when the new school year begins.

Women gathered in protest outside of the French embassy in the Gulf Arab state of Bahrain Thursday, urging an end to Chirac's plans to remove the Hijab from France's state schools. The women complained citing that other children are permitted to wear crosses and Jewish caps without a problem.

France has roughly five million active Muslims and the direction by Chirac is being viewed as a focused attack on Islam and its beliefs.

Jamin Raskin, a professor of Constitutional Law at American University Washington College of Law, was quoted during a live discussion[1],"Everything in French life revolves around rationality and proving things correct through empiricism, science and logic. This is a deeply admirable impulse, I think, especially in a world with so much religious fanaticism and hatred. This policy may just be driving something underground that needs to be expressed. Those Muslim girls should be in French schools learning math and science and history and the values of La Republique."

France's private school system is run for the most part by the Catholic Church. Since this rule cannot apply to private schools, there is great likelihood that Muslims will seek refuge in those schools in order to practice freedom of religious symbolism. Independent schools tend to accept religious and symbolic clothing as a freedom of expression. Since is not uncommon to see girls wearing Hijabs in private schools, the opportunity to escape Chirac's law may influence those practicing Islam to leave state run schools altogether.

The human rights advocacy group, the Islamic Human Rights Commission (IHRC), launched a campaign to urge the French government to drop plans to ban Hijab in public institutions.

Blocking this law is the first step to preserve freedom and tolerance in France's state run schools. Some view Chirac's request as ignorant of the Islamic faith, serving to feed the ill-conceived generalisation that all Arabs and Muslims are malevolent.

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References:

[1] Washtington Post Transcript Chirac Urges Ban On Head Scarves in Schools

Original: Bahrain Protests France's Ban on Muslim Scarves