|
France's controversial law banning religious
symbols from schools has provoked outrage from its five million
strong Muslim community.
|
 |
|
>>
The Headmaster & the
Headscarves
>>
Tuesday, 29
March, 2005
>>
2100 BST on
BBC Two
|
This World follows a group of veiled girls at Eugene
Delacroix school in Paris, who decide to resist the new law in
defiance of its headmaster, Raymond Scieux.
Monsieur Scieux firmly believes that
"religion must remain a personal matter," but the 10 veiled girls
at Delacroix insist that this issue is more complex.
One of these veiled students, Khadidja, is
asked: "If you had to choose between education and religion, which
would you choose?"
She answers: "That's a very good question
and I really don't know. I can't distinguish between the two
because for me, education is part of religion."
The majority of teaching staff at the
school are in favour of the ban because they feel that French
schools have a duty to help girls withstand religious pressure
from their families.
But the girls insist this is not the case,
that wearing the veil is a personal choice, and that they do not
need protecting.
In fact, Khadidja says her parents would
ask her to de-veil before sacrificing her education.
Khadidja is one of five veiled girls from
Delacroix who meet once a week - with a handful of anti-law
teachers and non-Muslim schoolfriends - to discuss how they can
fight a strict interpretation of the law at their school.
Their fear is that the headmaster will
decide to ban all headcoverings, so they search for a compromise.
But events take a dramatic turn after
Iraqi terrorists kidnap two French journalists and demand the
repeal of the ban.
And in a meeting at the school to discuss
the new rules, the veiled students soon feel victimised and
misunderstood.
Filmed over a year, with unique access to
events at the school, this documentary captures the anguish of
veiled schoolgirls, teachers, and school authorities as they
grapple with rules which threaten to inflame the tensions they
were designed to calm.
Directed and filmed by Elizabeth C Jones
Executive producer: Alison Rooper for In Focus Productions
Editor: Karen O'Connor
Source:
BBC News
|