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A library photo of a
hijab-clad teacher in a German school.
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By Ahmed Al-Matboli,
IOL Staff
BERLIN, March 24, 2005 (IslamOnline.net)
– The legislatures in two German states have turned down proposals by
the opposition Christian Democratic Party to ban Muslim school
teachers from wearing hijab.
The parliament of Nordrhein-Westfalen,
western Germany, rejected the party’s request as having no legal
merit.
The Christian Democratic party claimed
that hijab places woman at a lower status and was a political symbol
not entrenched in the Muslims’ holy book, the Noble Qur’an.
Thomas Kufen, the party’s immigration
affairs officer, alleged that disputes could emerge in schools over
the issue of hijab and that a legislation was needed.
The party, yet, said nuns should be
exempted for any ban on religious dress codes.
The Socialist and the Green parties, the
ruling coalition, as well as the Free Democratic Party had opposed the
proposals.
They particularly took issue at the
Christian Democratic Party’s attempt to exempt nuns’ wear from the ban
as a violation of the constitution which demands equal treatment for
citizens irrespective of their religious affiliations.
Islam sees hijab as
an obligatory code of dress, not a religious symbol
displaying one’s affiliations – unlike the symbolic Christian
crucifixes or Jewish Kappas.
Hindering Integration
The parliament of the south-western
state of Reinland-Pfalz also turned down a proposal by Christian
Democratic Party leader Christoph Bohr to ban hijab.
The Socialist, Green and Free Democratic
parties have voted against the motion, accusing the party of religious
discrimination.
Doris Ahnen, the education minister of
Reinland-Pfalz, condemned the ban request, saying it would obstruct
the integration of Muslim women into society.
The education affairs official in the
Green Party, Nils Fichmann, also opened fire on the Christian
Democratic Party, whose leaders had described hijab-clad women as
“enemies of the constitution”.
The Green party is the only political
party that rejects the hijab ban in principle.
Sylvia Lohrmann, the leader of the
party’s parliamentary bloc, stressed that the issue should not even be
open to discussion.
The Free Democrats, however, rejected
the hijab ban because it should have also include the head gear of
nuns in order to avoid any discrimination.
Germany's highest tribunal, the
constitutional court, ruled in 2003 that Baden-Wuerttemberg
was wrong to forbid a Muslim teacher from wearing hijab in
the classroom.
But it said Germany's 16 regional states
could issue new legislations to ban it if they believe hijab would
influence children.
The states of Hamburg,
Mecklenburg-Vorpommern,
Sachsen, Sachsen-Anhalt and Thuringen still allow teachers
to wear hijab.
In addition to Baden-Wuerttemberg, the
states of Saarland and Niedersachsen ban teachers from showing any
religious or political affiliation, including hijab.
Another state, Hessen, made amendments
to its school laws, banning teachers from wearing any symbols of
religious or political nature while allowing them a limited right to
put on Christian or western symbols.
In Bavaria, laws were enforced in 2004
banning teachers from wearing religious symbols that are not
harmonious with Christian cultural values.
The state of Brandenburg made the same
amendments in 2003.
For Now
IOL’s Correspondent cautions that the
parliaments’ rejection of the hijab ban proposal might only be
temporary and the controversy could surface again.
Nordrhein-Westfalen’s Education Minister
Ute Schafer, of the Socialist Party, told parliament members on March
17 that the number of hijab-clad teachers was very few and the issue
should not be raised “at present”.
Dorothee Danner, a Socialist lawmaker,
said her colleagues remain divided on the broader issue of hijab in
schools.
Some of the party’s MPs support a ban on
hijab, while others believe the issue should not be addressed “now”.
Danner, however, expected the issue to
be raised again in the coming legislative session.
A recent report by the International
Helsinki Federation for Human Rights (IHF) unveiled that Muslim
minorities across Europe have been experiencing growing distrust,
hostility and discrimination since the 9/11 attacks.
Muslim organizations have reported that
discrimination against Muslim women wearing hijab peaked since
September 11, the report said.
Source:
IslamOnline.net