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Hijab sparks controversy in Ireland
Jonathan Spollen,
Assistant Foreign Editor
The National
small town in southern Ireland has become
the unlikely scene of a controversy
involving the Islamic headscarf, opening up
a nationwide debate over whether Muslim
students
should be
allowed to wear it in Irish schools.
When Liam and Beverely Egan – both converts
to Islam – enrolled their daughter, Shekinah,
14, in Gorey Community School in September
of last year, the principal, Nicholas
Sweetman, initially told them she would
not be allowed to wear the headscarf, or
hijab, as it contravened the requirements of
the school uniform.
But after the couple
conveyed to Mr Sweetman the religious
significance of the hijab he agreed to let
Shekinah wear it, though he said the case
would have to be referred to the school’s
board of management, which in turn requested
guidelines from the department of education.
“You don’t see this happening with any other
religious symbols, only the hijab,” said
Mr Egan,
40, who converted to Islam 12 years ago and
returned to his native town of Gorey, about
100km south of Dublin, last summer after
spending 11 years in Saudi Arabia and Yemen
where he and his wife taught English.
The hijab “should be
protected under the [Irish] constitution. We
believe a woman should be allowed to express
her religious beliefs,” he said.
The departments of education and integration
are deciding whether to formulate guidelines
for school uniforms, ostensibly in response
to the case of the Egans, and will issue
their recommendations in the coming weeks.
The outcome will likely see the niqab – the
full face and body covering – banned and
possibly the hijab, too, Mr Egan said.
Mr Sweetman said the
board of management had sought guidance from
the department of education to ensure their
school was adhering to the same policies as
schools throughout the country and to
determine what clothing is, and is not,
permissible.
“There should be a government policy to
clarify issues like this,” he said. “If
someone decided to wear the niqab for
example, some teachers might feel
uncomfortable with that.”
The story attracted widespread national and
international media coverage after it broke
in the Irish press. Many politicians and
commentators said immigrants and minorities
should respect Irish culture and some
schools have taken measures towards banning
the hijab, with one reportedly citing
Ireland’s “Catholic ethos”.
“If people want to come into a western
society that is Christian and secular, they
need to conform to the rules and regulations
of that country,” Ruairi Quinn, a Labour
Party member of parliament, told the Irish
Independent.
Ireland, a
predominantly Catholic but secular country,
has agonised over its identity in recent
years as more than a decade of continual
economic growth has brought about
significant social and cultural changes.
The country’s population, which has grown by
almost a million since 1996 to 4.5 million,
has struggled to absorb the hundreds of
thousands of immigrants who have arrived
looking for jobs, fuelling the booming
economy but dramatically changing the
country’s demography.
At the same time the
role of the Catholic Church – central to
Irish life for hundreds of years – has waned
considerably.
To date, schools in Ireland have largely
tolerated female students from the country’s
Muslim community of just under 33,000
wearing the hijab as long as it matches the
colour of the uniform, in contrast to other
European countries like England, where there
have been moves to have it banned, and
France, where all religious symbols have
been prohibited from schools.
Moreover, an Irish
Times survey of 1,000 voters found that 48
per cent of the public support the wearing
of the hijab in state schools against 39 per
cent who oppose it, while 13 per cent had no
opinion. Notably, more women (55 per cent)
support the right to wear it than men.
Mr Egan
said a minority of “extreme secularists”
were behind opposition to the hijab and were
playing on fears within the Irish public
that religion will become a powerful force
again, as it once was under the Catholic
Church.
“They link everything
to the power the Catholic Church held, and
every religion suffers because of this
fear,” Mr Egan said.
“Secularists should not be attacking
religion. They’ve chucked God out the window
and replaced him with [atheist and
secularist author, Christopher] Dawkins.”
Shekinah Egan
said she did not know what she would do if
the hijab is banned from schools.
“I am worried they’ll come along and say I
can’t wear it,” she said. “And they haven’t
really come up with any reason.
“If they do ban it, it
will be a huge problem for me.”
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