By Cahal Milmo
09 November 2004
Pressure was mounting yesterday for national rules on Muslim dress
in schools to be drawn up after a local authority chose Ramadan to
enforce a ban on the jilbab, leading to protests from parents and
pupils.
Schools in Tower Hamlets, the London borough with the highest
concentration of Muslims in Britain, were accused of insensitivity
after letters were sent during the holiest month of the Muslim year
restating the dress code. The letters, which made clear that wearing
the jilbab - an ankle-length dress which covers the body except for
face and hands - was not permitted, led to three girls at one school
being withdrawn. Others pupils are understood to have protested
about the letters with some requesting to be moved to different
schools.
Muslim leaders called last night for
national guidelines to be drawn up on appropriate dress for Muslims
after a series of clashes between pupils and governors across the
country. This summer, a 15-year-old student from Luton lost a High
Court action after she argued her human rights were infringed when
she was excluded from lessons for wearing the jilbab.
Under current rules, dress codes are
decided by the headteacher and governors of each school in
accordance with guidelines provided by local authorities and central
government. Inyat Bunglawala, a spokesman for the Muslim Council of
Britain, said: "The current situation is causing chaos. Islam is a
diverse faith and some people feel their faith requires them to wear
the jilbab.
"We feel that those who wish to wear jilbab should be able to do so.
It seems the Government needs to set out precisely what is and is
not acceptable."
Rifat Akhtar, 13, a pupil at the Central Foundation school, said she
was considering a move. She said: "The jilbab is part of my
religious belief. It makes me confident and gives me an identity as
a Muslim."