Jamaica Gleaner

Court rules against a Muslim girl who wanted to pray at a school known for strict rules

-

LONDON (AP): A Muslim student who wanted to pray during lunchtime lost a court fight on Tuesday against a strict London school that had banned prayer on campus.

A High Court judge said the female student had accepted when she enrolled in the school that she would be subject to religious restrictio­ns.

“She knew that the school is secular and her own evidence is that her mother wished her to go there because it was known to be strict,” Justice Thomas Linden wrote in an 83-page ruling. “Long before the prayer ritual policy was introduced, she and her friends believed that prayer was not permitted at school and she therefore made up for missed prayers when she got home.”

The fight was over a rule put in place last year by the Michaela Community School after a small group of students who began praying in the schoolyard caused divisions at the school that spread to the community and led to a bomb threat. A black teacher, who had confronted the praying students, was accused of “disgusting, Islamophob­ic behaviour”and subjected to racist abuse in an online petition.

The high-performing secular school in the Wembley area imposes a rigid set of rules and discipline on its diverse body of students, half of whom are Muslim.

The Muslim girl, with her mother’s help, sued the school for “the kind of discrimina­tion which makes religious minorities feel alienated from society”.

The girl, who cannot be named, by court order, said she wanted to pray over lunch break during a period of fall and winter, when the height of the sun requires performing one of Islam’s five daily prayer rituals at that time of day. She sued the school over the policy, claiming it violated her religious freedom and the European Convention on Human Rights.

The school argued that any interferen­ce the ban had on the girl’s religious rights was justified because the prayer ritual conflicted with its strict rules, and it was impractica­l to accommodat­e other students who wanted to pray. The school noted that Islam allows the prayer to be performed later in the day, and said the student could transfer to a school that allowed prayer.

The judge said the larger purpose of the ban on prayer — to promote the school’s ethos of integratin­g pupils from different faiths, cultures and ethnic background­s while minimising social distinctio­ns — outweighed its adverse impact on Muslim students.

 ?? AP ?? An exterior view of the ‘Michaela Community School’ in Brent, northwest London, England, on Tuesday, April 16. A Muslim student who wanted to pray during lunchtime has lost a court fight against a strict London school that had banned prayer on campus.
AP An exterior view of the ‘Michaela Community School’ in Brent, northwest London, England, on Tuesday, April 16. A Muslim student who wanted to pray during lunchtime has lost a court fight against a strict London school that had banned prayer on campus.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Jamaica