Paul
Goble
Staunton, September 12 – Moscow’s
ban on the hijab in schools has sparked anger in the Islamic and human rights
communities and resistance in Muslim republics like Tatarstan, but its most dangerous
consequences are becoming clear now: repressive actions by Russian officials,
demands for home schooling among Muslims, and radicalization on both sides.
On
the “Word without Borders” portal yesterday, Yekaterina Trifonova says that the
fight over the hijab has taken different forms in different parts of the
Russian Federation. In some, the
compromise has been to allow Muslim children to be home schooled, and in
others, the hijab has been accepted as part of the uniform (wordyou.ru/kolonki/urok-na-vsyu-zhizn.html).
But in what she calls “’the historic
motherland of conflict,’” Stavropol kray, the situation is “only getting worse”
because the local educational establishment “has thought up a new way” to
prevent Muslim girls from getting an education, one that is insulting, illegal,
unconstitutional, and radicalizing all around.
School officials there have decreed
that Muslim parents who want to home school their children cannot simply do so on
their own according to the standard curriculum but rather must hire special
teachers to come to provide such instruction, something that puts this
possibility beyond the means of most families.
Elena
Sinyayeva, a Stavropol resident, says her family has been having problems ever
since it joined an appeal to the Russian Supreme Court about the hijab on May
30. Her husband was arrested after
officials planted drugs on him: he is still in detention and has been
physically but not mentally broken.
Then,
because the family no longer could afford to hire a teacher and refused to send
their daughter to school without a hijab, the director of the local school
threatened to deprive the mother of her parental rights and put the daughter in
an orphanage. The school has refused to
comment on this action, Trifonova says.
In
short, she continues, this case has grown into something more than a dispute
about hijabs and become a horrific lesson about how the Russian authorities
want to deal with anyone who thinks differently. Unfortunately, the threat from
the school to take the daughter away from her parents was not the last act of
this drama.
Instead,
education officials in Stavropol suggested that if the family didn’t like the
way things were in that kray, they should leave, possibly going to Daghestan
where wearing the hijab would not be a problem. Some families have done so, but
the Sinyayevs are not going to take that step.
“The
leadership of the school said: ‘go to Daghestan.’ But on the basis of what law?
My husband and I are Stavropol natives;
this is our home. What will happen next?”
In
short, as is increasingly the case in the Russian Federation, an unfortunate
even illegitimate law adopted in Moscow is being applied by officials and
others in ways that are guaranteed to make the situation worse, triggering a
spiral of radicalization that is certain to trigger even more problems ahead.
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