Letter to French President, Jacques Chirac


October 17, 2000
Président Jacques Chirac
Monsieur le Président de la République
Palais de l’Elysée
55, Rue du Faubourg Saint-Honoré
75008, Paris, France

Dear Monsieur le Président,

I am writing on behalf of KARAMAH: MUSLIM WOMEN LAWYERS FOR HUMAN RIGHTS to voice our concerns about young Muslim women's access to education in France. We are concerned that young Muslim women who choose to wear headscarves continue to be denied their right to education and to practice their religion freely. We are further concerned that the French government, the historical seat of the modern human rights movement, has not sufficiently marshaled its forces against the rising tide of intolerance facing both immigrant and citizen Muslims in France. Even the United States government has taken note of the French debate over "le foulard Islamique," noting in its 1999 Annual Human Rights Report that there has been no definitive national decision on "whether denying some Muslim girls the right to wear head scarves in public schools constitutes a violation of the right to practice their religion" (See U.S. Department of State 1999 Country Reports on Human Rights Practices, February 25, 2000).

KARAMAH is a United States-based human rights organization that focuses on issues of human rights for Muslims. Karamah means "dignity" in Arabic; we believe that all human beings, regardless of race, status or gender, are endowed with the same dignity. We are Muslim women lawyers—some of us wear headscarves and some do not. It is in the spirit of KARAMAH and in the tradition of the French polity that gave birth to the Declaration of the Rights of the Man and Citizen in 1789 that I write to you.

We commend the 1989 decision of the Conseil d'Etat, ruling that the Criel school principal who suspended three Muslim school girls wearing headscarves had violated the freedom of religion of the girls, guaranteed to them by the French Constitution. We further commend the Conseil's 1995 decision, affirming that simply wearing a headscarf does not provide grounds for exclusion from school and reversing decisions that had expelled school girls in such situations.

Yet we note with concern more recent events that demonstrate a disregard for fundamental human rights: the refusal of teachers in Normandy to teach Muslim students with headscarves; the statement by Interior Minister Jean Pierre Chevenement that headscarves often mark women as inferior to men and render their integration into French society more difficult; and the position of the Government upholding a decision expelling two Muslim girls who wore headscarves from their junior high school. More importantly, we strongly disagree with the Conseil's October 1999 decision to reaffirm a ban on headscarves in public schools.

We are concerned that as members of a religious minority and as young women or girls, these Muslim school children are facing a double violation of their rights, when in fact it is for the protection of such potentially vulnerable communities that international human rights and domestic civil rights norms are established. Not only is the right to free exercise of religion being denied to these Muslim students, but as young women, they are being subjected to an attempted "secularization" that is not directed towards young men. The attempts to prohibit the wearing of headscarves in French public schools have evidenced a gendered and religious double standard in French society, and we urge you to guarantee to all school children in France, religious and non-religious, boys and girls, the right to an education.

The right to education is protected by both the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (ICCPR) and the Convention against Discrimination in Education. The ICCPR states:

Everyone shall have the right to freedom of thought, conscience, and religion. This right shall include freedom to have or to adopt a religion or belief of his [sic] choice, and freedom, either individually or in community with others and in public or private, to manifest his religion or belief in worship, observance, practice, and teaching. (Article 18, ICCPR, emphasis added.)

Further, the U.N. Human Rights Committee's General Comment clarifying article 18 noted that "when legislation is adopted by a State party, it must comply with the requirement of article 26 that it should not be discriminatory." The French government policy to ban only so-called "ostentatious" signs of religious belief in state schools, however, has been applied in a discriminatory fashion. It has been directed only towards Muslim schoolgirls who wear headscarves and not to members of any other religious group who wear religious symbols.

Critics of "le foulard Islamique" in school allege that scarves pose a health risk to students engaging in physical activity—particularly in physical education classes. However, there have been no documented health studies supporting such a claim. In the absence of any concrete evidence of physical danger created by wearing headscarves, excluding Muslim female students who wear head scarves is a "solution" to a non-existent problem, a "solution" that compromises religious freedom and gender equality.

Critics further claim that the headscarf is an attempt at proselytizing in schools, threatening the secular nature of French society. However, this same charge has not been leveled at Christian or Jewish signs of distinction, only at Muslim ones. Jewish boys or young men who choose to wear yarmulkes are not barred from attending public school; French schoolteachers have exhibited a tolerance of this tradition. Young Muslim women should not be denied the same right of religious statement.

Rather than a neutral, secular stance, restrictions on young Muslim women's right to wear headscarves instead reflect a patriarchal and oppressive attitude within French society towards these young women and their bodies. More troubling to Karamah is the French government's apparent willingness to support such an attitude. Those in France who would prohibit Muslim girls with headscarves from attending French public schools have claimed that the girls have not independently chosen to wear headscarves. Rather, they have argued, these girls are being compelled to wear headscarves by their families or the larger Muslim community.

First, KARAMAH strongly rejects the Orientalist gaze that undergirds this claim—the idea that any manifestation of religion by a Muslim must be a product of coercion or group thinking, rather than a product of a reasoned decision by a Muslim individual. Second, we note that the individual agency and personal freedom to choose to wear a yarmulke by young Jewish boys is never questioned or cited as a reason to deny these schoolboys access to education. Fifty years after Simone de Beauvoir’s The Second Sex, her observations still ring true—women are still regarded as subjective, passive beings, while males are granted both objectivity and agency.

KARAMAH agrees with those in the French public who call for the veiled youngsters to enter French republican society. Yet Karamah also insists, as Jean-Jacques Rousseau once wrote, that education is the cornerstone to the development of the democratic citizen. Key to the development of the French citizen is exposure to and engagement with the political and philosophical ideals of the French republic. Every school child in France deserves—and has the right to—a French education. Muslim schoolgirls who wear headscarves must be given the same opportunity as other French students to read Rousseau and study French republican and political thought. By denying education to these Muslim girls, the French government blocks them from entering French civil and political society.

KARAMAH calls on the French government to maintain and enforce an even-handed, non-discriminatory policy for people of all religious beliefs and of both genders. We call for a policy that allows freedom of conscience and freedom of statement to thrive in a diverse society. We call for a policy that does not succumb to bigotry, conformity, and prejudice. The headscarf worn by a Muslim schoolgirl is not a harbinger of terrorism or extremism. It is a simple symbol of religious faith.

KARAMAH calls on the French government to protect the fundamental human rights of Muslim schoolgirls who have chosen to wear headscarves, by insuring their admission to and proper treatment in schools. KARAMAH also urges the French government to develop a concrete, strategic plan to combat racism and prejudice amongst school officials and teachers, through staff training and governmental directives.

The vicious memories of the World War in Europe, and the potential for prejudice and insensitivity to escalate into massive violence, still remain fresh in the contemporary collective memory. We call on France to lead Europe in confronting the contemporary challenges at hand. Do not let bigotry, prejudice, and hatred define 21st century Europe. Instead, let France take its proper place as a leader in the human rights community and to serve as a model for multi-religious and multi-ethnic states to emulate as civil societies worldwide become increasingly ethnically and religiously diverse.

Respectfully,

Sameera Fazili
Executive Director
KARAMAH: MUSLIM WOMEN LAWYERS FOR HUMAN RIGHTS

 

 

 



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