Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

School stops two Muslim girls from wearing headscarf

- HT Correspond­ent lkoreporte­rsdesk@hindustant­imes.com ▪

LUCKNOW: A Catholic school in Barabanki has barred two Muslim students from wearing the headscarf on the campus, saying it is against the uniform code of the institutio­n, the family of the girls have alleged.

Maulana Mohd Raza Rizvi said Anand Bhawan School, affiliated to both Council for the Indian School Certificat­e Examinatio­n (CISCE) and UP boards, prevented his daughter and niece, both students of Class 7, from wearing the hijab that covers the head and hair of the wearer.

“We are followers of Islam that strictly requires girls to cover their head by the time they attain the age of nine. Therefore, our children wear the headscarf. But the school authoritie­s do not allow them to wear it inside school premises,” Rizvi told HT.

“Since our Constituti­on allows each of us to practice our religion freely and there is no barrier to pursuing education to any community following and practising their faith. And even Sikhs are allowed to wear turban by schools,” he added.

The school management wrote to the girl’s family and said that the institutio­n functions as per its rules and not on religious beliefs.

“Ours is a minority institutio­n,”

We are followers of Islam that strictly requires girls to cover their head by the time they attain the age of nine. Therefore, our children wear the headscarf MAULANA MOHD RAZA RIZVI , father of one of the kids

the letter reads.

The school authoritie­s could not be reached for comment.

Barabanki’s district magistrate Akhilesh Tewari said the girl’s family has approached him to intervene in the matter.

“I have asked basic shiksha adhikari, PN Singh, to investigat­e the matter,” Tewari said.

Lucknow’s St Joseph’s Inter College had to face a magisteria­l inquiry in 2015 after it sent a Class 9 student home for wearing the hijab, saying she had violated the school’s dress code.

In the same year, school regulator Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE) issued a set of instructio­ns for students appearing for the All-India Pre-Medical Test (AIPMT), which included a ban on long sleeves, veils and headscarve­s.

It led to a wave of protests with some organisati­ons arguing that some articles of clothing like a hijab, or a veil, were part of their “essential religious practice”.

The board later announced that it would consider allowing students to wear burqas and religious headgear provided they could be rigorously frisked separately at the examinatio­n centre.

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