Times Colonist

In Quebec, hijabs return to spotlight as veiled Muslim seeks election

- GIUSEPPE VALIANTE

MONTREAL — The divisive debate in Quebec about the clothes Muslim women choose to wear is back in the spotlight, less than six months before the fall provincial election.

Montreal Mayor Valerie Plante suggested last week she is open to city police officers wearing a Sikh turban or an Islamic headscarf, known as the hijab, as part of the official uniform — a practice not uncommon in Canada outside Quebec.

Around the same time, Eve Torres, a 44-year-old Muslim mother of three who proudly wears a hijab, announced she was seeking the nomination in a Montreal-area riding for Quebec solidaire, the legislatur­e’s most left-leaning party. Torres is so far unopposed and is being billed as the first veiled woman to run in a Quebec provincial election.

Heated criticism on TV and in newspapers ensued. “The veil is a symbol used by Islamists to make their presence known in the public sphere and to occupy that space by the principle of maximum visibility,” wrote Mathieu Bock-Cote, a columnist in the Le Journal de Montreal. A column by Denise Bombardier in the same newspaper was published with a photo of a veiled Torres under the headline, Our dark future.

Bock-Cote, Bombardier and another populist writer for Le Journal, Lise Ravary, suggested Torres was an “Islamist,” a word that carries a strong connotatio­n of fundamenta­lism and militancy.

Torres, who describes herself as a feminist who is running to fight for “social justice,” told the Canadian Press Monday she was expecting the reaction.

“For the past 10 years in Quebec, Muslim women have been a big part of the political discussion — somewhat against their will,” she said.

“I am not an Islamist, I have never been one and I don’t plan on becoming one.”

News of her candidacy took another twist Monday when Parti Quebecois Leader Jean-Francois Lisee mentioned Torres directly. If the PQ wins the Oct. 1 election, Lisee said, he will introduce a bill forbidding state employees such as judges, Crown prosecutor­s, police officers, prison guards as well as primary and secondary school teachers from wearing religious symbols on the job.

 ?? CANADIAN PRESS ?? Candidate Eve Torres.
CANADIAN PRESS Candidate Eve Torres.

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