this post was submitted on 21 Mar 2025
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Canada’s largest Muslim organisation is outraged over a bill introduced by the Quebec government that would ban headscarves for school support staff and students.

“In Quebec, we made the decision that state and the religion are separate,” said Education Minister Bernard Drainville, CBC News reported. “And today, we say the public schools are separate from religion.”

But the National Council of Canadian Muslims (NCCM), who are challenging in the Supreme Court the original bill that forbids religious symbols being worn by teachers, say the new bill is another infringement on their rights and unfairly targets hijab-wearing Muslims.

“This renewed attack on the fundamental rights of our community is just one of several recent actions taken by this historically unpopular government to bolster their poll numbers by attacking the rights of Muslim Canadians,” the NCCM said in a social media post.

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[–] gonzo-rand19@moist.catsweat.com 3 points 4 days ago (1 children)

I also dislike religion and I'm with you on how harmful it is (raised Catholic, 14 years of faith-based schooling). The problem is the broad assumption that every Muslim woman is being coerced and then using that (wrong) assumption to force other women to wear (or not wear) certain things.

I would love it if all religion just like, ceased to exist one day. But we're not there, so this law actually promotes religious oppression and, just like all other forms of oppression, I don't want that for people, especially not in Canada. I don't feel like banning head coverings actually eliminates the problem of coercion in Muslim communities.

I'm willing to admit that, yes, oppression of Muslim women is a problem within our borders (and Canadian women have been victim to honour killings on and off Canadian soil), but banning coverings doesn't solve that problem. Banning coverings solves one problem for some women and creates a problem for others. I don't think it's good policy and makes Quebecers look even more Islamophobic than they did before.