Society's Child
The girl was stopped from going to class earlier this month by the head teacher who reportedly felt the long skirt -- popular among some Muslim women who cover their whole body -- "conspicuously" showed religious affiliation, which is banned in schools by France's strict secularity laws.
"The girl was not excluded, she was asked to come back with a neutral outfit and it seems her father did not want the student to come back to school," local education official Patrice Dutot told AFP on Tuesday.
He added that the student always removed her veil before entering school premises in the northeastern town of Charleville-Mezieres, as is specifically stipulated by law.
According to the 2004 law that governs secularity in schools, veils, the Jewish kippa or large Christian crosses are all banned in educational establishments, but "discreet religious signs" are allowed.
The student, whom local daily L'Ardennais identified as Sarah, told the newspaper her skirt was "nothing special, it's very simple, there's nothing conspicuous. There is no religious sign whatsoever."
Her story was trending on Twitter in France Tuesday with the hashtag #JePorteMaJupeCommeJeVeux, translated into English as "I wear my skirt as I please."
"If it's worn by a 'white' person, it's hippy chic, if it's a Muslim, it becomes conspicuous," one user tweeted.
But the regional education office hinted in a statement that wearing the skirt could have been part of a concerted "provocation."
"When it comes to concerted protest actions by students, which follow other more visible incidents linked for instance to wearing the veil, the secular framework for education must be firmly reminded and guaranteed," it said.
According to the CCIF Islamophobia watchdog, some 130 students were rejected from class last year for outfits deemed too openly religious.
Reader Comments
The war against freedom. Pure and simple.
Short skirt - bad. Long skirt - bad. Black skirt - bad. Pants - probably bad too.
-- "The girl was not excluded, she was asked to come back with a neutral outfit and it seems her father did not want the student to come back to school," local education official Patrice Dutot told AFP on Tuesday.
Can't blame the father. I wouldn't want my daughter to return to a school run by fascist retards either.
-- "veils, the Jewish kippa or large Christian crosses are all banned in educational establishments"
I'd be the first to say that all these 3 religions are bullshit, but when you ban children from school for wearing pretty ordinary things, what else does it say than that you're a huge intolerant fuck?
-- But the regional education office hinted in a statement that wearing the skirt could have been part of a concerted "provocation."
"could have" So you don't have a clue. You just kick her out of school first and speculate later. Besides, what provocation? Sounds a lot like expressing an opinion is not allowed either.
Drop all illusions of our society making any kind of "progress". Our society is degenerating, not evolving. There's less freedom, less tolerance, more work for less money, more idiocy, and hardly any common sense left.
@Mandatory Intellectomy:
Great comment.
The other day I was on one of my very infrequent trips away from our own small farm. (I went to a farm auction.)
On the way home, I saw an old lady and a young boy dressed very peculiarly. The old lady had on a bonnet and a long dress and the young boy had on a kind of denim suit with clunky, dorky boots. He also had a strange haircut They were fishing off of a bridge. The old lady talked nicely, but the young boy said nary a word, even when I spoke directly to him. Not far away, a horse and buggy stood, the horse tied to a tree. They were Amish.
I thought about calling in for a airstrike, to eliminate their strangeness and failure to adapt properly to modern culture; and aggressively wipe them off the face of the earth, but I decided to let them be.
I hope my superior officers don't reproach me for my indiscretion, insubordination and total lack of military valor. I suppose I should have at least had them arrested and detained, the young boy in particular, was clearly not right in his mind.
In retrospect, there are quite a few Amish in that area, and their numbers may be growing. This is indeed a danger to good citizens out driving their properly registered licensed and operated motor vehicles, as I was.
ned
(some of the above was sarcasm)
[Link]
I am really disappointed in your lack of actions nedlud
We are all in imminent danger from terrorists posing as school kids and your lack of action is tantamount to supporting terrorism
You need to embrace the new culture ... "see something / say something"
NB: The point of this exercise is not so that the authorities can be informed of potential terrorists, it is so that they can identify those who withhold information and are therefore against us ....
@HashAttack:
This is supposedly a true story, from about 20 or even 30 years ago (better days, not as bad as now):
A Pennsylvania (Lancaster Co.) Amish farmer was out, plowing one of his fields one spring with a 'horse hitch' (possibly 4 or, more likely, 6 or more large draft horses, on a gang plow)....
...a couple from Florida, on vacation, stopped their car and approached him, wanting him to pose for pictures. (Amish people do not care much to be photographed). He refused and went back about his business. The couple then went into town, to the mayor's office or the police station and demanded that the Amish farmer be fined, disciplined appropriately or even dismissed. The couple apparently thought the farmer was an employee and the whole thing (the Amish settlement) was a tourist site, a kind of outdoor museum or theater of entertainment for people like themselves to enjoy.
It never occurred to these two bimbos that they were the ones being rude and disrespectful and stupid beyond belief.
ned





