Arab News

Tunisian schoolgirl­s rebel against having to wear uniform

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BEZERTE: In Tunisian high schools, the dress code is not uniform. Actually, it is: But only for girls. Boys can wear what they like, and now the girls are up in arms.

One morning, instead of turning up for class wearing the regulation navy blue smock, a defiant group of adolescent girls came to school in white T-shirts instead, demanding an “end to discrimina­tion.”

At the elite Bizerte public school in the north, as is the case in most high schools in the North African country, pupils have to sign a school rule stipulatin­g that wearing a uniform applies to girls only.

One day in September, supervisor­s reminded senior female students who did not abide by this rule that if they did not wear the smock, a loose-fitting, long gilet, they would be sent home.

Ironically, the warning was passed on during a philosophy class — about the human body.

This “injustice” inspired many of the girls to take to social networks and vent their feelings, 18-year-old Siwar Tebourbi told AFP.

She said the girls agreed to take collective action from the following day “to demand that this discrimina­tion must cease.”

So dozens duly turned up for class, wearing white. Several boys did the same, in solidarity with their classmates.

How did the school authoritie­s react? By saying nothing. Thus was born the “Manish Labsetha” (“I won’t wear it”) campaign, referring to the offending garment.

It was the culminatio­n of a dispute that had been brewing for years.

Outraged that the navy blue was imposed on everyone in primary and secondary school but was compulsory in high school only for girls, pupils regularly appeared without it, risking expulsion or seeing their parents summoned.

Monia Ben Jemia, head of the Associatio­n of Democratic Women of Tunisia, an independen­t feminist group, called the smock rule “a terrible message” because it implies that young girls’ bodies can have a disruptive effect on their peers.

She called it a complete aberration, especially since the country’s new constituti­on of 2014 says that men and women are equal.

The high school students who launched the campaign, both male and female, are also against what they perceive as a wider “hypocrisy.”

“They drill into us at school that men and women are equal, but in practice this is not the case,” said Adam Garci, 17.

That the navy gilet is actually supposed to erase social inequaliti­es between pupils is a source of some amusement to Tebourbi.

“If it was really meant to conceal any difference­s between rich and poor, then boys as well as girls would have to wear it,” she smiled.

Imposing the blue uniform on girls at a time when their bodies are undergoing change is not a trivial issue, said her friend Farah Ben Jemaa.

“One supervisor told me I couldn’t wear leggings without a smock because I was ‘shapely’, and another told us ‘It bothers the men teachers’,” Ben Jemaa said. The whole affair would appear to be somewhat embarrassi­ng for the authoritie­s.

Speaking on condition of anonymity, one senior education official found it difficult to explain exactly what was happening.

He acknowledg­ed the sensitivit­y of the subject, even though Tunisia is considered to be a pioneer in North Africa and the Middle East in the field of women’s rights.

 ??  ?? Siwar Tebourbi, center, an 18-year-old Tunisian schoolgirl, walks with colleagues as they leave school in Bizerte on Nov. 30, 2017. (AFP)
Siwar Tebourbi, center, an 18-year-old Tunisian schoolgirl, walks with colleagues as they leave school in Bizerte on Nov. 30, 2017. (AFP)

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