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Muslim Girl
Prohibited From Wearing Hijab At Spanish School
by Emma Daly
Source: The Observer
Feb 18 2002 - A war
of words has broken out in staunchly Catholic Spain between a
13-year-old Moroccan girl and the government, which has compared her
desire to wear a traditional Muslim headscarf to school with the
practice of female circumcision.
Fatima, 13, her mother, Zhora, and three younger
siblings, arrived in Spain last autumn to join her father Ali el-Hadi,
a construction worker who has been living here for 13 years. The local
authorities assigned Fatima a place at a Catholic school where pupils
must wear uniform, prompting Hadi to ask that she be allowed to attend
the local state school, the Instituto Juan de Herrera in the town of
San Lorenzo de El Escorial, north-west of Madrid.
However, the principal refused to allow
Fatima to attend
wearing her headscarf. Delia Durَ
said she did not want any girl 'coming with a veil, a chador or any
type of dress that is a symbol of submission, of women in this case,
and which violates citizens' civil rights.'
Ali el-Hadi said it was Fatima who chose to wear
the veil, and that 'if she wants, she can take it off'. He was keen
for his daughter to attend school, but said if the school would not
let her in wearing the veil, she would not go.
'And they will be the ones who are excluding her,'
he added.
Durَ's
decision was supported by the Education Minister, Pilar del Castillo,
who argued that the hejab is not a 'religious symbol but a sign of
discrimination against women'.
Fatima,
she said, 'will have to go to school dressed the same as the other
girls', adding that she was prepared to legislate over the issue if
necessary.
The Minister for Labour and Social Affairs, Juan
Carlos Aparicio, does not believe
Spain needs to ban
the veil but his criticism of the custom went further. He told a
meeting of the ruling Popular Party that 'there are customs which are
always unacceptable, and we can cite two examples - the use of
discriminatory clothing, or, very clearly, the practice of female
genital circumcision; it cannot be understood as a cultural or
religious concept, but only as savagery.'
The Association of Moroccan Workers and Immigrants
in
Spain has said it
will file suit against the school if it continues to ban Fatima's
headscarf, and asked both the government and the opposition Socialist
Party to reflect on the issue with 'serenity'.
The controversy is surprising, given that in the
predominantly Muslim Spanish enclaves of
Ceuta and Melilla girls in hejab routinely attend state schools. The
same is true for schools in parts of Andalusia with a high proportion
of Muslim immigrants.
Dr Mansur Escudero, who heads
Spain's Islamic Commission, an official body, has filed several
complaints over the banning of the veil, winning agreement from the
Interior Ministry, for instance, that women could wear hejab in photos
for passports or national identity documents.
Three years ago, a similar case in a
Madrid school was resolved with the girl allowed to wear the veil.
'That is why this case surprises me,' Escudero said.
'They have entered very dangerous territory. It
seems the government's attitude, especially after 11 September, is to
show the public and the
United States that
it is maintaining a firm position towards Muslims. That is the
interpretation some of us put on this situation.'
Statistics show the proportion of Muslim girls
compared to boys at school falls at adolescence, education officials
say, arguing that some immigrant Muslim families are less interested
in educating girls.
The Socialist Education spokes-man came out against
Fatima, but another
Socialist parliamentarian supported her right to choose, saying
attempts to ban her headscarf violated her rights. 'What is in play
here is the rights of the girl, not the rules of a school. And the
girl's right is to wear the veil if she wants,' said Diego Lَpez Garrido.
Source:
http://islamicsydney.com/story.php?id=320
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