The education minister says female Muslim students will not be allowed to wear the loose-fitting robe.
Pupils will be banned from wearing abayas, loose-fitting full-length robes worn by some Muslim women, in France's state-run schools, the education minister has said.
The rule will be applied as soon as the new school year starts on 4 September.
France has a strict ban on religious signs in state schools and government buildings, arguing that they violate secular laws.
Wearing a headscarf has been banned since 2004 in state-run schools.
For a 200 year old law, it's pretty straight forward. And for all it's flaws, the Nth revolution didn't like the Catholic church for ... reasons, so they wanted to make a law to get them out of politics and make them liable for their shenanigans. Thankfully they didn't discriminate when they wrote the law.
PROHIBITIONS AND LIMITS TO INDIVIDUAL FREEDOMS IN THE
FRAMEWORK OF “LAÏCITÉ”
The principle of secularism means that the State and religious organisations are separate.
There is therefore no state-run public worship. The State neither recognises, nor subsidises,
nor salaries any form of worship. Exceptions and adjustments to the ban on funding are
defined in the legislation and case-law; they concern in particular chaplaincies, which are paid
for by the State1
No religion can impose its prescriptions on the Republic. No religious principle can be
invoked for disobeying the law.
Laîcite is the right for each, to practice his/her religion, without the state interfering, if not against laws and in the respect concerning other peoples. Without being prosecuted for this..
They now change the word to be against Muslims in France. Because "laicite" is always use against them.
Abayas are not religious dress nor a symbol of a religion, and the law does not speak to individual choices about wearing religious symbols anyway. This is no different to banning 'Black' hairstyles or imposing sexist dress codes. It's racism, not secularism.
And tell the believing women to lower their gaze and guard their chastity, and not to reveal their adornments1 except what normally appears.2
This verse has been traditionally used by Muslims to enforce social norms or laws to prevent women from showing their hair. When there's a religious enforcement to hide your hair, clothes that hide hair become part of the religious liturgy.
No religion can impose its prescriptions on the Republic. No religious principle can be invoked for disobeying the law.
I don't see how wearing cultural clothing would be imposing anything. I have Indian heritage -- would I be banned from wearing punjabis in public, despite it having no religious bearing at all?
You're not from the religion that has been plaguing the country with terrorism for years, that's the difference. I know it's cultural, but we have history. Something like 2 years ago a teacher got beheaded. Since then we're seeing lots of "cultural expression" in schools. This is not the french way. In France you act like French, period.
I was unaware that everyone from that religion was a terrorist and supported that beheading. The cornerstone of liberty and democracy relies on not judging people by their heritage, culture, nor religion. It's unconscionable to persecute by association.
All this will do is create more tension and resentment. It isn't how you end terrorism. It's how you create it. If you want to maintain a philosophy of "in France you act French", so be it. But recognize in doing so, you're adopting the same way of thinking as America's conservatives. And that should give you significant pause.
if the state doesnt recognise any form of worship, why are they seemingly banning perceived symbols of worship? how does any of the law you quoted justify banning folks from even wearing perceived religious symbols?
unless this isnt a religious symbol anyway, in which case the above law is even less relevant and this is a blatant case of cultural discrimination
Except banning anything at school is the opposite of what's written here: the Republic forbid wearing some dress because it's wrongly associated with religion.
The government is turning atheism into an oppressive religion.
Says the guy with the randomly generated username from random.org
People woth randomised usernames are usually trolls or bad faith accounts because they want to make it harder for their accounts to be found by using randomised usernames