Paul
Goble
Staunton, September 18 – The Russian
government’s ban on the wearing of the hijab in schools not only has led to
widespread civil disobedience with local officials looking the other way at
violations but has cut school attendance in some regions and led some regional
officials to tell Russian citizens that if they don’t like the ban, they should
leave the country.
The “hijab problem,” as many refer to
it, has arisen because Islam requires Muslim girls to cover their hair and
Russian law prohibits them from doing so in schools. In the city of Moscow, some school officials
are allowing Muslim girls to wear the hijab anyway, but in Moscow oblast and elsewhere,
most are not (islamnews.ru/news-141805.html).
According to Nikolay Zhukov, an official
in Moscow oblast, everyone is trying to avoid having such “collisions” get out
of hand. In one school, where about 20
percent of the students are Muslims (Azerbaijanis and Tajiks), only two girls
or more precisely their parents demanded that they be allowed to wear the
hijab.
One of the two girls stopped coming to
school altogether, while the other has come only irregularly, Zhukov says. Administrators been trying to find a way out,
including offering home schooling, something the fathers of the two are not
happy about. One mother counter-proposed
having her daughter wear a wig to satisfy the religious requirement. “We’ve thrown up our hands.”
What officials are worried about, he
continued, is that the problems of the two will spread to the other Muslim
students, something that could be a real difficulty if it happens. Indeed, on Fridays, this is already happening
with more Muslim students wearing hijabs or not coming to school at all because
they are going to the mosque.
Zhukov said that something else is
going on as well: Muslim students are self-segregating themselves in the upper
grades. In some classes, there are no
Muslim students at all while in another, presumably on the same subject, there
are as many as 50 percent Muslim pupils. What does this mean? And how should a
secular school system respond?
In a speech to the Valdai Club this
week, Damir Mukhetdinov, the first deputy chairman of the Muslim Spiritual
Directorate (MSD) of Muslims of the European Portion of Russia, said that the
hijab ban in the schools of thecountry has already acquired a troubling “all-Russian
dimension” (islamrf.ru/news/russia/rusnews/29161/).
Given that the Russian Supreme Court
has permitted Muslims to wear a hijab when they are photographed for a
passport, it is difficult to see why Muslim pupils cannot wear the hijab to
class. And it is very disturbing that
some Russian officials are using this ban as a political football to curry
favor with some of their constituents.
The governor of Astrakhan, for
example, has told the parents who do not agree with the hijab ban that they
should “change their Motherland,” even though Muslims currently form 29 percent
of his oblast’s residents. Such comments do little to calm the situation,
Mukhetdinov added.
But even worse, the implicit
suggestion behind them that some groups have priority over others “on the basis
of their numbers” or presence in a particular territory open the door to
fights, both verbal and otherwise over “’who is more important and who is
stronger,’” fights that will only exacerbate problems.
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