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He added that the school would \"continue to emphasise that all staff members act in a way meant to empower and inspire our students,\" and \"use this video as an opportunity to press forward with increasing cultural sensitivity and awareness among all members of the New Vision community.\"
The 16-year-old varsity cross-country athlete had just achieved a personal best in a 5K invitational, and was making plans to celebrate with friends. Then, her heart sank: Abukaram's name was missing from the official place list because, she soon learned, she was wearing a hijab.
This summer's event marked the 50th anniversary of both the race and of Title IX, which prohibits sex-based discrimination in activities like school sports. \"I crossed the finish line and just felt like, 'I can't wait to run another race like this, and in a city like New York,\" Abukaram said.
In the summer, Abukaram learned the hard way that light-weight hijabs were critical. \"Sometimes my sports hijabs will be dirty, and then I'll have to run in a normal one and I'll feel like I'm suffocating,\" she said.
That's why she's grateful more brands are making modest athletic wear, though there still needs to be more visibility of hijabs in sport, she said. She's doing her part by allowing people to donate a sport hijab to young Muslim athletes in need through Let Noor Run.
Amid increasing tensions and protests between Hindu and Muslim students around the hijab in schools, Karnataka authorities have shut down schools and colleges for three days. On February 8, as the Karnataka High Court heard petitions by Muslim students supporting the right to wear the hijab, viral videos emerged of a mob of Hindu youth heckling a female Muslim student for wearing one. A day later, according to a news report, admission forms of six female Muslim students at the forefront of the protests, including their phone numbers and home addresses, were leaked online.
The hijab ban is the latest example of Indian authorities increasingly seeking to marginalize Muslims, exposing them to heightened violence. At the national and state levels, BJP governments have adopted a slew of laws and policies that systematically discriminate against religious minorities and vulnerable communities, especially Muslims.
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A series of religious laws promoted by India's ruling Hindu nationalist party in the southern state of Karnataka, including a ban on the wearing of hijabs, is raising concerns the divisive measures will stoke sectarian tensions more prevalent in the country's north. Prime Minister Narendra Modi's Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) recently banned wearing the hijab in classrooms in Karnataka, the only one of India's five southern states it rules. A proposal to make religious conversions largely illegal is being considered by the local legislature. The moves have become an issue of contention involving India's Muslim minority. Opposition parties and many political analysts accuse the BJP of fomenting tensions in Karnataka to consolidate its appeal to majority Hindus, like they say it has elsewhere in the country. Modi's office did not immediately respond to a request seeking comment. The BJP has denied that Karnataka's Feb. 5 hijab ban, a recent bill aimed at mainly preventing conversion of poor Hindus to Christianity and Islam, and a 2021 law prohibiting the slaughter of cows - considered sacred in Hinduism - were designed to pander to the majority community. BJP's Karnataka spokesperson Ganesh Karnik blamed Muslims for seeking what he called a different identity by insisting on wearing the hijab in class, and said the dispute could unite Hindus. \"They look at every issue as a victim,\" said Karnik. \"If they take a stand, the Hindu community will also take a stand. Our young girls and boys will be disturbed (thinking) why are they being given a special privilege\" He said the BJP was confident of retaining power in Karnataka state elections next year and then expanding further in the region. \"We are expanding, we will rule more southern states. If not today, tomorrow, if not tomorrow, the day after,\" Karnik said. Muzaffar Assadi, a political analyst who teaches at Karnataka's University of Mysore, said the hijab issue targets youth who would be 18 and eligible to vote in time for next year's state election and the national election, which is due in 2024. \"They are potential voters, so you just rake up the issue, create a wedge and ultimately you have a base for the next election,\" said Assadi. Muslims say the hijab row is another example of their marginalisation since Modi first took office in 2014 on a platform of good governance and a strong Hindu identity.read the complete article
Muslims in the Dutch capital Amsterdam believe that Islamophobia is \"becoming increasingly normalised in society,\" with many of them experiencing discrimination and hate crimes based on their outfit and names, according to a study. A study into Islamophobia and anti-Muslim hate crimes conducted by the Amsterdam municipality found that Muslims living in the city regularly face discrimination, the English-language newspaper NL Times reported on Sunday. It said that researchers in the study found that \"respondents believe the normalisation of Islamophobia is fuelled by the increasing influence of the extreme-right spectrum of politics.\" \"The media also plays a role, with many respondents saying that the way Muslims are portrayed has a polarising effect and contributes to a negative self-image,\" the study showed. \"The Muslim community also has a role in this, with some respondents saying incendiary preachers harm society by magnifying the differences between secular and Muslim Amsterdam.\" Citing a local newspaper, Het Parool, the NL Times said: \"They [Muslims] report being unable to find an internship because of their religion, being called names for wearing a hijab, and facing hate speech on social media without anyone batting an eye, researchers found.\"read the complete article
The families of the victims of an Islamophobic assault at a Dunedin school have not been told of the discipline the attackers will face, the Otago Muslim Association says. Hoda Al-Jamaa was sitting with her friends at Otago Girls' High School last week when three students approached and started beating her while they filmed the attack. The 17-year-old had her hijab ripped off and suffered a concussion. Last week, a member of Dunedin's Muslim community told RNZ it was not the first time the girls had faced Islamophobic abuse at the school. Otago Muslim Association chairperson Mohammed Rizwan said the three victims had since returned to school. \"They actually started back at school last week. As for Hoda, she did start back but she was getting headaches and couldn't concentrate, so she's at home to allow her to recover,\" he said. The victims had not received any apology or message from their attackers, Dr Rizwan said. The families had been told there was a disciplinary meeting last Thursday, but they were not informed of its outcome.read the complete article
There is no official state religion, and religious groups are not required to register with the Government. Public funding for Roman Catholic schools is constitutionally protected in the country's original four provinces.
In March, the Quebec Human Rights Commission ruled that a private school could not expel a Muslim student for wearing a hijab (head scarf) after a September 2003 incident in which a 16-year-old girl refused to remove her hijab. In August, the Government issued a statement assuring Muslims that their religious right to wear a hijab would be respected and protected when photographs are taken for the Canadian Permanent Resident card. The statement responded to complaints made by Muslim women who were told to remove their hijab at the Pierre Trudeau International Airport in Montreal.
In the first 8 months of the year, the League for Human Rights of B'nai Brith received nearly 600 reports of anti-Semitism, compared with 584 such reports in all of 2003. Incidents included harassment (66 percent of incidents), vandalism of property (31 percent), and violence (3 percent). For example: On April 4, the library of a Jewish elementary school in Montreal was firebombed; the perpetrator was awaiting sentencing at year's end. On June 2, vandals overturned 20 gravestones in the Beth Israel Cemetery in Quebec City. In December, the major windows of a synagogue in the Greater Toronto area were smashed. All levels of government reacted strongly to the incidents.
The Government demonstrated its strong commitment to children's rights and welfare through its well-funded systems of public education and medical care. Education is free through grade 13 and is compulsory nationwide through age 15 or 16, depending on the province. UNICEF reported that 100 percent of elementary-age children attended school, and most children graduated from high school. Federal and provincial regulations protect children from abuse, overwork, and discrimination and penalize perpetrators of such offenses.
The law prohibits trafficking in persons; however, trafficking remained a problem. The law establishes criminal penalties of up to life in prison and fines of up to $800,000 (Cdn $1 million) for convicted traffickers; however, no prosecutions have yet resulted from the legislation. On February 11, a Montreal court sentenced a man charged in 2002 (prior to passage of the new law) of being part of a prostitution ring, which involved girls as young as 14, to 3 years in jail. 153554b96e
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