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Religious headscarf divides Mangalore College
Maya Sharma, Tuesday August 18, 2009, Mangalore

A Muslim girl student in Bantwal near Mangalore has decided to leave her college after it asked her not to wear her headscarf in class -- after Hindu students objected to her wearing it.

This is just the latest incidence of religious friction in the district in recent years. Earlier this year - a Kerala MLAs daughter studying in Mangalore said she was pulled off a bus forcibly along with the Muslim friend she was talking to. And there are frequent reports of Hindus and Muslims being asked not to speak together in public.

Ayesha is angry. The young Muslim girl a first year student of SVS College in Bantwal near Mangalore was not permitted to wear a headscarf to class.

The pressure to remove her religious symbol came not just from the college administration, but many of her fellow students.

"They said if you wear the scarf we will wear saffron shawls," she says.

Ayesha first walked out of college two weeks ago, when she was asked to remove the head scarf. But she came back -- determined to attend college on her terms. But the college did not relent. The college administrators say they are caught in the middle of the dispute. They personally have nothing her wearing the scarf, but want her to remove it in the classroom to do away with the tension.

The college's official dress code includes saris for women lecturers and does not permit the black dhotis of Ayyappa devotees, but makes no mention of headscarves for women Muslim students.

SVS College Principal Sitaram Mayya says: "It is one rule for all students. She is the only one not following the rule."

Ayesha has decided that she cannot continue in the college in what is an increasingly volatile environment. Reports surface periodically in the district of Hindus and Muslims talking together in public or eating together in a restaurant being asked to leave. In this case, the divisive forces would seem to have won as this young girl leaves her college. Ayesha's scarf has become just the latest symbol of religious intolerance on Karnataka's coast.

 
 
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Posted by singh on Aug 28, 2009
Where and who would draw the line on what people should do or shouldn't do? Its way too much. Let the constitution be the supreme law which gives religious freedom to everybody. What about the guys wearing even sport caps? Or the ladies wearing scarf in the winter? Or here in the Punjab alot of ladies wear dupatta on the head? Let the girl wear what she wants, let it be scarf or bikini. Institutions like these should be sued and punished strictly to make an example so the future institutions dont dare to even think of this. But alas law in India is only for the books, every body has their own law in this country. Shame.
Posted by The True Secularist on Aug 27, 2009
Religion is a personal thing and should be practiced either at home or the place of worship.One should not insist to take it to schools,colleges or the offices. India is indeed a secular country and no one is dicreminated but to take the religion or the religious dress code to public schools , colleges or offices should not be allowed and this does not make the country less secular at all.On one hand the muslim community says they are not allowed to join the main stream on the other hand they want to implement religious dress code and project their separate identity.Some 20 years or so back most of the muslims were seen in normal dress (usually western) and clean shaved.Now it has become a trend to wear Salwar Khamiz and Pathani Shirts and Payjamas with either a cap or a turban and must have a beard.Even small children age 3 going to school are made to wear caps.Saris are taboo in Islam.(Sari is Unislamic)Girls are made to wear burqas.This is done to project themselves different from others.This very thing shows that they want keep their identity separat and donot want to join the main stream.In schools and colleges or be offices if they find another muslim they would group together and not mingle with others unless he is lone muslim.It proper not allow any religious dress code in these institution which becomes an hurdle in joining the main stream and such things should not encouraged in the name of secularism or any other ism. In Gujarat the State run bus services has banned display of pictures of Gods and Godesses in its buses,including govt offices.This is secularism.
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