Schoolgirls who refused to change out of the loose-fitting robes have been sent home with a letter to parents on secularism.


French public schools have sent dozens of girls home for refusing to remove their abayas – long, loose-fitting robes worn by some Muslim women and girls – on the first day of the school year, according to Education Minister Gabriel Attal.

Defying a ban on the garment seen as a religious symbol, nearly 300 girls showed up on Monday morning wearing abayas, Attal told the BFM broadcaster on Tuesday.

Most agreed to change out of the robe, but 67 refused and were sent home, he said.

The government announced last month it was banning the abaya in schools, saying it broke the rules on secularism in education that have already seen headscarves forbidden on the grounds they constitute a display of religious affiliation.

The move gladdened the political right but the hard left argued it represented an affront to civil liberties.

The 34-year-old minister said the girls refused entry on Monday were given a letter addressed to their families saying that “secularism is not a constraint, it is a liberty”.

If they showed up at school again wearing the gown there would be a “new dialogue”.

He added that he was in favour of trialling school uniforms or a dress code amid the debate over the ban.

Uniforms have not been obligatory in French schools since 1968 but have regularly come back on the political agenda, often pushed by conservative and far-right politicians.

Attal said he would provide a timetable later this year for carrying out a trial run of uniforms with any schools that agree to participate.

“I don’t think that the school uniform is a miracle solution that solves all problems related to harassment, social inequalities or secularism,” he said.

But he added: “We must go through experiments, try things out” in order to promote debate, he said.


‘Worst consequences’

Al Jazeera’s Natacha Butler, reporting from Paris before the ban came into force said Attal deemed the abaya a religious symbol which violates French secularism.

“Since 2004, in France, religious signs and symbols have been banned in schools, including headscarves, kippas and crosses,” she said.

“Gabriel Attal, the education minister, says that no one should walk into a classroom wearing something which could suggest what their religion is.”

On Monday, President Emmanuel Macron defended the controversial measure, saying there was a “minority” in France who “hijack a religion and challenge the republic and secularism”.

He said it leads to the “worst consequences” such as the murder three years ago of teacher Samuel Paty for showing Prophet Muhammad caricatures during a civics education class.

“We cannot act as if the terrorist attack, the murder of Samuel Paty, had not happened,” he said in an interview with the YouTube channel, HugoDecrypte.

An association representing Muslims has filed a motion with the State Council, France’s highest court for complaints against state authorities, for an injunction against the ban on the abaya and the qamis, its equivalent dress for men.

The Action for the Rights of Muslims (ADM) motion is to be examined later on Tuesday.


    • @espentan@lemmy.world
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      41 year ago

      Or not wearing. I just had a chat with the flying spaghetti monster, and it told me I had to stop wearing pants in public. I’ll be seriously pissed off if my lack of garments will stop me from getting an education.

  • Hyperreality
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    861 year ago

    For those who don’t get this, ‘Laïcité’ is what the French call the secularism which is part of their constitution.

    Plenty are as serious about it, as many in the US are about free speech or the right to own a gun.

    Obviously this is also in part a more recent phenomenon. France has a large Muslim population and laïcité is arguably interpreted more strictly by those who wish to combat the influence of Islam on French mainstream culture.

    • @Kecessa@sh.itjust.works
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      381 year ago

      In Quebec we usually have to explain the difference between secularism and laïcité by mentioning that secularism is the separation of church and State by accommodating all religions equally while laïcité is the separation of church and State by excluding religion from the public domain. Quebec’s take on laïcité is more relaxed than France’s.

      • I think what’s so annoying about these laws is that they go à contresens, by strengthening religion in civic life. These girls are now forced to go to religious schools if they want to continue wearing their harmless cultural dress. In fact, religious schools have exploded in population since the laws on laïcité have passed in France. Many of those girls would have otherwise integrated into French society and become bored of religion, just like Catholic children do, if they went to a normal school. I remember listening to a French philosopher on a debate program say “Seuls les pays qui ont interdit le port du voile ont fini par l’imposer”. I don’t know if that’s literally true, but I think banning makes many muslims feel defiant and more passionate about their religious identity.

        It’s especially galling in Canada, which has one of the most well-integrated and moderate Muslim minority populations in the world. A law like this is actively harmful to the goal of lessening “la pertinence de la religion dans la vie civile”. It goes against its own goals, to solve a problem that doesn’t exist.

        • @Kecessa@sh.itjust.works
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          21 year ago

          Since you’re mentioning Canada, at the same time in Quebec (the only place with a similar law) it’s only for government employees in a position of authority so I don’t think it’s really an issue considering we already impose restrictions on the same employees when it comes to displaying political signs and it received support from many people that are part of the groups most affected because they don’t want to have left a country where religion is part of politics only to go live somewhere where it’s trying to do the same thing. Creating a barrier between the two where we say “If your religion is so important to you that you can’t accept to remove the sign you’re wearing while at work, it might mean you are not ready to represent a laïc State” isn’t a bad thing. I wouldn’t support a ban for students or all government employees and so on (like France is doing).

          • I’ve heard this argument that it’s “not so bad” in Quebec, but I don’t know why we need to accept any “badness” at all. What countervailing benefit justifies the cost? Students will not convert to Sikhism or Islam because they’re taught by a Sikh or Muslim teacher. It’s a non-issue.

            Contrary to what you say, the affected groups are far from supportive. In fact, I would not be surprised one bit if, like in France, Muslims in Quebec have hardened their views, becoming more devout, in response to la loi 21.

            • @Kecessa@sh.itjust.works
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              I said it’s not an issue and that it’s not a bad thing, not that it’s “not so bad” and that we’re tolerating “badness”.

              It’s not about conversion, it’s about discrimination or the appearance of discrimination by an employee of the State.

              How does a Jewish defendant feel when a judge that’s visibly Muslim makes a decision against them? Well that judge represents the State and the State needs to be neutral and to have the appearance of neutrality in front of the people it has authority over.

              And again, that judge couldn’t have a hammer and sickle pin on their robe even though the freedom of political opinion and of expressing it is as protected as the freedom of religious expression. Can you imagine a visibly communist judge making a decision against a private business suing the government? Yeah, that wouldn’t fly.

              • How does a non-white defendant feel when a visibly white judge, which are most judges, makes a decision against them? Or a man rules against a woman who is a rape victim? Such things happen all the time. People seem perfectly happy with state representatives being white, without quotas or positive discrimination to improve diversity. Why all this concern for “social justice” only when it comes to these minority religions?

                Do you really think there is no “badness” at all… for anyone? Some people have had to make a difficult decision between career and identity. You might be blasé about that decision, but for some people it would be as difficult as being forbidden from speaking your native language, or forbidden from being openly gay.

                • @Kecessa@sh.itjust.works
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                  The difference here is that skin color and gender aren’t a choice, whereas wearing a religious sign, just like wearing a sign of your political allegiance, is a choice.

                  Unless you tell me that wearing a kippah isn’t a choice for the wearer, which would be in direct violation of our charter or rights and freedom…

                  The people concerned also get affected if their religious sign can’t be worn because of uniforms, they don’t go and sue employers that tell them they can’t wear a safety hat over a turban or that they can’t drive a transport van while wearing a burqa that hinders their view. If their sign is so important that they can’t satisfy the criterias for the job they just go work in another field and that’s it.

                  The State doesn’t have to guarantee access to jobs to people who don’t fit the criterias for the job, including the responsibility to appear neutral. The perfect State employee in a position of authority would be a robot that looks nothing like a human with a gender neutral voice, since we can’t have that we’re stuck telling people that they need to adopt a neutral appearance to work certain jobs or they can go do the equivalent job in the private sector if it exists or they can take other tasks which don’t put them in a position of authority, including some very good jobs for the State!

      • @bouh@lemmy.world
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        -171 year ago

        Laïcité should be the accommodation of all religion. Laïcité is tolerance. But the fascists are turning it into bullying religions.

            • @Kecessa@sh.itjust.works
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              Is it getting rebuilt for it’s religious importance or historical importance? Do they rebuild all churches that burn down?

              Hint: Answers start with h and n

              • Magnor
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                21 year ago

                Actually the State does pay for a big part of church maintenance: link.

              • @bouh@lemmy.world
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                21 year ago

                That’s just hypocrisy here. The building is used for religious ceremonies. There’s nothing more religious than this church.

                Now mind you I’m not against rebuilding it, because I’m not an anti religion zealot. I’m merely pointing out the hypocrisy of hunting Muslims out of schools in the name of laicity while rebuilding a church with state money.

        • @CybranM@feddit.nu
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          31 year ago

          Definitely shouldn’t be accommodating to ancient cults. I don’t want people who never grew out of believing in Santa to decide how to educate children

          • @Kecessa@sh.itjust.works
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            21 year ago

            That’s Quebec’s take, government employees in a position of authority (including teachers) can’t wear religious signs, the rest is free to do what they want (unlike France’s version where students can’t wear religious signs either).

    • @Floufym@lemmy.world
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      01 year ago

      To be fair, it is more correct to say « France is a racist country hiding behind laïcité and feminism to justify their Islamophobia. »

      • Its funny that Islamists use the term “Islamophobia” considering they teach an homophobic culture themselves. Dont ask for tolerance if you are not willing to be tolerant yourself.

      • @sudneo@lemmy.world
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        11 year ago

        All other religious symbols are also banned (in schools), so this argument seems pretty weak. One can agree or disagree, but considering religion a private matter that should stay out of the public buildings is a perfectly legitimate stance, in my opinion.

  • Tankiedesantski [he/him]
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    541 year ago

    In EVIL CEE CEE PEE CHYNA, Muslim children are denied education if they wear their cultural attire to school.

  • @some_guy@lemmy.sdf.org
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    501 year ago

    “Gabriel Attal, the education minister, says that no one should walk into a classroom wearing something which could suggest what their religion is.”

    I was initially torn on this, but as long as it’s for all religions, I support it. I firmly believe that I shouldn’t know your religion unless I ask. Religion is toxic.

    I do think you should have the freedom to wear religious signifiers as an adult. I just don’t approve. But I don’t want to stop you. Children in school? This is the same (to me) as requiring them to leave their phones at home.

    • Cethin
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      531 year ago

      In the Americas there were schools for native American children where they forced them to dress, eat, speak, and behave “properly” and not practice their religion. The goal was to eliminate their culture and make them homogeneously American or Canadian. (They also killed a fucking ton) This sort of nationalism has generally been looked back on as a mistake and a horrible atrocity. Why should it be acceptable towards other religious groups?

      • @some_guy@lemmy.sdf.org
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        291 year ago

        These kids aren’t being taken from their families. They aren’t being forced to give up their religion in their homes. These are not the same. This isn’t about “other religious groups.” It’s all religions while at school, and I’m fine with that.

        • Cethin
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          201 year ago

          The goal is to replace religion with nationalism, which isn’t an admirable goal. They may not literally say it out loud, but it’s pretty obvious.

          • @some_guy@lemmy.sdf.org
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            141 year ago

            I’m not in support of nationalism. I don’t know if what you said is accurate or not. I simply approve of keeping religion out of schools.

            • GarbageShoot [he/him]
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              41 year ago

              This is like the democrats who applaud gun control even when it is used with surgical precision to prevent black communities from defending themselves from police violence. “I don’t support police violence, I simply approve of gun control”.

            • @MashedTech@lemmy.world
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              01 year ago

              As much as you wish, I don’t think you can because it is a part of one’s life. Whether you are Atheist or practice a religion, the beliefs and practices you have are in my opinion fundamental for you. Let’s take the reverse, would you as an Atheist pretend to believe in a certain religion for 4-6 hours a day just so you could learn? You can take this and experiment with all kinds of situations. Sure, religion shouldn’t be taught in schools, religion has nothing to do with schools but while we shouldn’t teach religion we shouldn’t also take religion out of the human. Your beliefs are fundamental to you. I think there is a certain level of tolerance we should have towards other people as long as they don’t interfere and infringe on the freedoms and liberties of others. Having the freedom to wear what you want and act the way you want while you don’t bother others should be allowed.

              If you want to have a private school where everyone follows a specific rule set, regulation, specific formal clothing etc. Go ahead, make your own.

              But I do feel public schools as a public good should allow everyone to learn while also not requiring one to remove parts of things that form one’s identity.

              • Spzi
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                51 year ago

                would you as an Atheist pretend to believe in a certain religion for 4-6 hours a day

                France wants people to not show their religion in school. That’s different from pretending to have another, or no religion.

                Like in moments when I don’t wear my favorite sports team’s insignias, I’m not pretending to be fan of another team instead.

              • @some_guy@lemmy.sdf.org
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                41 year ago

                I generally wish to respect others. But I can’t help but note that mass shooters are frequently deeply Christian. I’m not advocating for someone to pretend that they believe in another religion or that they don’t believe in their own. I’m mildly offended by people who advertise their religion by wearing a cross above their clothing. I think they should tuck it below so that I don’t know what their religion is because frankly, I find their faith offensive. It’s unfortunate that some religions require that their faithful observe traditions that make it obvious that they are faithful.

                Religion is, at its root, a system of control and an excuse for bad behavior. At it’s worst it is a grift and a shortcut to genocide. I know that there are many religious people who are good and descent (my mother, for example), but I still resent that her religion guides her politics in ways that are illogical. I had a friend who believed in 1999 that the earth was ~5000 years old and that dinosaurs were a test of his faith by god. Religion is holding us back.

        • @Uncaged_Jay@lemmy.world
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          -11 year ago

          Okay, so how is this different from saying “I don’t care if they’re gay, as long as it’s in the privacy of their own homes”? It’s the same sentiment about what is (to some) also an immutable characteristic about their personality

          • @some_guy@lemmy.sdf.org
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            41 year ago

            This is a strong argument and initially left me speechless. However, religion is something you choose. I don’t think people choose to be gay.

    • Adkml [he/him]
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      1 year ago

      I was initially torn on this, but as long as it’s for all religions, I support it.

      The law, in its majestic equality, forbids rich and poor alike to sleep under bridges, to beg in the streets, and to steal their bread

      Yea they made it so nobody could wear religious cultural clothes but there’s only one religion that includes wearing those clothes as a belief.

      Would you also support a policy that nobody named @some_guy should be allowed to talk, no matter who they are.

      • usernamesaredifficul [he/him]
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        281 year ago

        Yea they made it so nobody could wear religious cultural clothes but there’s only one religion that includes wearing those clothes as a belief

        there are multiple such as Islam and Sikhism to give two examples. This law is just an example of religious persecution against religions that don’t fit in with the French idea of which religions a French person should have

        • Adkml [he/him]
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          241 year ago

          Your right should have said there’s multiple religions it was discriminating against just highlighting how it lines up with Frances history of Islamophobia.

      • nudny ekscentryk
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        111 year ago

        Yea they made it so nobody could wear religious cultural clothes but there’s only one religion that includes wearing those clothes as a belief.

        One, this is not true. Two, this includes other symbols like pendants

      • uralsolo [he/him]
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        81 year ago

        Presumably if a bunch of Mormons or Mennonites or whatever else set up in France and all their kids dressed the same way, the school would step in on that too. Maybe they wouldn’t, but then the problem isn’t the policy it’s biased enforcement.

      • @some_guy@lemmy.sdf.org
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        11 year ago

        The first is a good argument. And I support breaking that law.

        The second is a good argument in that I wasn’t factoring the requirement (which I kinda don’t care about because I reject religion, so I know that I’m wrong even though I reject religion, fuck religion). Were religion not so toxic, I would have more sympathy. In this case, I’m gonna sound like a real fuckwad, but assimilate.

        The third is just silly.

        • usernamesaredifficul [he/him]
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          1 year ago

          I’m gonna sound like a real fuckwad, but assimilate.

          bruh-moment

          can’t believe you just said “facing persecution for your religious faith simply don’t be a member of the religious minority being persecuted”

              • At which point it becomes child abuse. And the state should step in. Let’s not forget that France also doesn’t permit the display of any religious symbolism instate institutions including Christian. Either these kids are free to choose a different item of clothing, or they’re being abused by their family. Simple.

                • @PolandIsAStateOfMind@lemmy.ml
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                  Every kid of belivers is being rased in their faith, worldwide. It is religious indoctrination and frankly i agree that this is child abuse, but it’s not illegal anywhere. People refraining from this and allowing the children to choose are very rare. And even then it might still not exactly be the choice, in basically all societies there is considerable peer and social pressure to conform to its values.

        • GarbageShoot [he/him]
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          291 year ago

          “Just assimilate to Christian culture, Muslims. I’m anti-religion of all kinds, btw.”

          You are too caught up in liberal abstraction to allow yourself to understand the material reality.

          • uralsolo [he/him]
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            91 year ago

            The kids aren’t being made to attend church on Sunday. They’re being made to be part of a secular society, one that takes its secularism more seriously than many other countries do.

            • GarbageShoot [he/him]
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              61 year ago

              Pure reactionary sophistry. They are not made to go to church, but they still get the Christian Sabbath off but not Muslim Jumu’ah (their equivalent, midday prayer) on Fridays. France is “secular” but it just so happens that the laws of its “secularism” cut in a direction that wildly favors Christianity.

              You claim to be a communist, don’t you? You should know this quote:

              The law, in its majestic equality, forbids rich and poor alike to sleep under bridges, to beg in the streets, and to steal their bread.

              – Anatole France

              As I said, liberal abstraction that obscures the deliberate material impact of the laws.

                • GarbageShoot [he/him]
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                  81 year ago

                  I was taking an opportunity to demonstrate a point with what you said, not suggesting that all bread stealing should be legalized.

                  Your ideology is a joke. “Surely, some girl wearing too baggy a dress will hamper education and heighten religious differences. No, we must teach these children tolerance by socializing them in an environment where we have eliminated any visible deviations from the dominant (liberal Christian) culture. Then, when they go out on the street and see people who look different, they will in fact be more tolerant of people with traits alien to how they were socialized.”

                  Every word you say is just laundering reactionary bullshit under a veil of virtue.

              • Neshura
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                11 year ago

                Christian Sabbath off but not Muslim Jumu’ah

                hear me out: that just might be, really far stretch I know, but it just might be because the western weekend formed out of the Jewish Sabbath, which was adopted by Christianity. However it is not anymore the justification for having it. The only reason Saturday and Sunday are the weekend is because nobody bothered moving the date after the religious meaning was largely lost on the general population. Religion in Europe is in steep decline, unlike in certain other parts of the western world.

                France has a population of ~40% Atheist/Agnostics. If you seriously think Christianity dictates the laws in France you are delusional.

        • Adkml [he/him]
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          201 year ago

          Wow. So literally saying they should just assimilate, so much for that whole “they have to respect our culture because we respect theirs”

          Also yea the third point was stupid, it was to illustrate how dumb your argument was.

          Bit then you just came out and admitted to being a bigot and leapfrogging my point.

          • @some_guy@lemmy.sdf.org
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            21 year ago

            I am bigoted against religion. I otherwise accept everyone for who they are. I have no shame in taking this stance.

            • Adkml [he/him]
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              191 year ago

              Yea bigots generally aren’t shameful about their bigotry they just usually try to tap dance around the word bigot, good for you for being honest I guess.

            • AOCapitulator [they/them, she/her]
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              181 year ago

              The point people are trying to make is that it’s not the religion that’s being targeted, but the minority non white culture, and it’s being done in a way to hide its true intent, which you are supporting based on its appearance.

              This has nothing to do with secularism and everything to do with punishing and invalidating nonwhite culture

              • @some_guy@lemmy.sdf.org
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                11 year ago

                I suspect that you’re right and if that’s the case, that’s terrible. I would support removal of religion from schools simply on the basis that it’s the source of most of the world’s wars. In the US, I think we should take the gloves off and churches should pay taxes. I detest that it causes people to vote and behave irrationally and is used as a smoke screen to excuse bad behavior. My support for kicking religion out of schools is based in that and does not apply as a tool to suppress non-western peoples.

                It’s unfortunate that what you’re suggesting is probably the real reason. Put me in charge and it really will be because I’m sick of religion in a completely colorblind fashion.

                • AOCapitulator [they/them, she/her]
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                  111 year ago

                  world’s wars

                  You may have a leg to stand on in terms of premodern history, but for the last 150 years most wars have been due to capitalism, not religion. You are not exactly incorrect, but you are in my view taking symptoms as the disease, when we really need to zoom out, religion itself isn’t the base level problem, its authoritative structures not derived from the consent and for the betterment of the people, religion is but a powerful historical tool

                • usernamesaredifficul [he/him]
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                  61 year ago

                  Well if we look at the Romans, Assyrians, British, French, and Germans and their wars it’s abundantly clear that most of their wars were for the aquisition of wealth. The vast majority of wars even in the middle ages were openly about arguments between noble families over land

                • GarbageShoot [he/him]
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                  31 year ago

                  I would support removal of religion from schools simply on the basis that it’s the source of most of the world’s wars.

                  This is false. It was used as the pretext for most of the world’s wars, just as secular equality is used as the pretext for this law, but the actual cause of those and virtually all wars lies in material motivations (land, resources, etc), just as the true objective of the law is to forcibly assimilate minorities.

    • @m0darn@lemmy.ca
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      281 year ago

      An Abaya is just a flowing robe.

      This ban is like an American school saying you’re allowed to wear cowboy hats but not sombreros because sombreros are associated with catholicism, in that they are mostly associated with the culture of a predominately catholic country.

      This is like banning kids from wearing rainbows because it signifies their values.

        • @m0darn@lemmy.ca
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          The rule isn’t no flowing robes.

          The rule is “no flowing robes on kids suspected of being muslim”.

      • @packadal@beehaw.org
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        61 year ago

        I disagree, the Abaya is not just a flowing robe.

        It is a garment that is required by the Sharia law (see Saudi Arabia and other Muslim countries where women are not allowed to choose what they wear).

        Allowing this is the first step in letting religion in the public schools in France, where it has always been explicitly banned.

        And it is very unlike banning rainbows, those are a symbol used to promote acceptance of the diversity of others, something religions struggle with (ever notice how religion is closely tied with extremism?)

        Another factor to take into account is that these young girl may be forced by their family to wear such a garment, imposing upon them something they may not be old enough to refuse.

        Also, look up the paradox of intolerance, as allowing anyone to do as they please causes the rise of extremism.

        • @ursakhiin@beehaw.org
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          31 year ago

          This is a very hyperbolic take on that paradox.

          An article of clothing can’t be religious on its own. Saudi Arabia may have done the wrong thing by requiring this specific article of clothing but banning it is also bad.

          A girl may want to wear a loose fitting dress for any number of reasons. Some people are just more modest than others and that shouldn’t be punished.

          Looking at abaya online, and as a westerner I actually kinda like the style of them as well. I could see them being work as a strictly fashionable article of clothing.

          • @packadal@beehaw.org
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            31 year ago

            An article of clothing can’t be religious on its own

            Really? What about a kippa ? Or a priest’s robes ?

            The kippa is forbidden in french schools for this very same reason, it signals religion.

            Loose fitting dresses are not forbidden, abayas are. They are a specific kind of loose fitting dresses. One that signals religion.

            I don’t see them working as a fashion article, but that may just be my taste.

        • @m0darn@lemmy.ca
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          01 year ago

          I really appreciate you engaging in more than just one liners.

          I disagree, the Abaya is not just a flowing robe.

          It is a garment that is required by the Sharia law (see Saudi Arabia and other Muslim countries where women are not allowed to choose what they wear).

          From le Monde

          [Saudi Arabia] Since 2022 (…) has outlawed the wearing of abaya for women during examinations.

          It is not a religious garment. It is a cultural garment. You’re right that it is often worn by Muslim women/girls to achieve islamic notions of modesty. But it’s predominately worn by people strongly influenced by Arab culture, not muslims everywhere.

          I agree that countries should not generally be dictating what people are allowed to wear.

          Allowing this is the first step in letting religion in the public schools in France, where it has always been explicitly banned.

          Except it’s not the first step in letting religion in schools. It was already allowed and then was banned. The pendulum is swinging away from religious tolerance. It would be more accurate to view the ban as the next step in a series of measures further disembracing France’s ethnic minorities.

          And it is very unlike banning rainbows, those are a symbol used to promote acceptance of the diversity of others

          So you support symbols of the acceptance of the diversity of others. But you do not support actual acceptance of cultural diversity.

          ever notice how religion is closely tied with extremism?

          Yes. Too many religions have dark histories/presents.

          Another factor to take into account is that these young girl may be forced by their family to wear such a garment, imposing upon them something they may not be old enough to refuse.

          I think the best way to help people in situations like this is to get them into environments where they can make strong relationships with people outside their family’s religion. Like public schools.

          Also, look up the paradox of intolerance, as allowing anyone to do as they please causes the rise of extremism.

          I’m familiar with the concept and agree that limitations to freedom are necessary to protect freedom. But is it intolerance to wear an Abaya or is it intolerance to forbid unfamiliar styles of clothing?

          I applaud France’s goal of a secular society. But I think this policy is a misstep.

          Look at images of abaya compared to duster cardigans and maybe you’ll see what I mean.

    • usernamesaredifficul [he/him]
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      221 year ago

      as requiring them to leave their phones at home

      you can’t just leave religion and culture at the door and freedom of conscience isn’t a right only adults are entitled to nor is it comparable to playing on your phone

      • uralsolo [he/him]
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        61 year ago

        Are kids meaningfully capable of exercising their freedom of conscience though? I’m not suggesting that every religious parent would kick their children out of the house for not dressing a certain way, but I am saying that every religious parent puts their finger on the scale of their kids’ decision. Schools can and should seek to eliminate these kinds of cultural differences within the student body because it teaches kids to segregate themselves, that’s why school uniforms are generally a good thing.

        • usernamesaredifficul [he/him]
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          1 year ago

          Are kids meaningfully capable of exercising their freedom of conscience though

          arguably not but you could also make that argument in favour of all children being forced to wear islamic dress.

          yes religious parents put their finger on the scale of the kids decision but so do non-religious parents with regards to their kids religious views that’s just how raising children within a culture works. It’s not a lifetime commitment the same freedom of conscience that means they have a right to practice their faith also means they have a right to abandon it if once they are older they change their minds.

          ols can and should seek to eliminate these kinds of cultural differences within the student body because it teaches kids to segregate themselves, that’s why school uniforms are generally a good thing.

          school uniforms are a good thing but exemptions to uniform rules on religious grounds have been a long recorded tradition. When the British forced sepoys to use cartridges that meant they had to partially consume beef and pork fat were the Indians wrong to compain or were the British merely removing cultural differences between the Muslims, Hindus, and British.

  • SoyViking [he/him]
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    501 year ago

    Racism against children must be one of these “western values” I’ve been hearing so much about.

    • Kosh [she/her]
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      581 year ago

      French people will claim that secularism is the most important value in all of France but them half of the national days off are Catholic holidays.

      • @Landrin201@lemmy.ml
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        71 year ago

        Also I’m willing to bet really good money that if a nun wore a habit to a beach, she wouldn’t get fined. A muslim woman wearing a burkini would though.

      • @loutr@sh.itjust.works
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        51 year ago

        There’s such a thing as cultural heritage. Revolutionaries tried to do away with it but it didn’t take. Most of them were pagan holidays which were co-opted by the church anyway.

      • @Elderos@lemmings.world
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        1 year ago

        Because we keep national days purely for religious reasons, right? How about we abolish Halloween too, all those hypocrite atheists all over the world pretending not to believe in religions.

    • @pedro@lemm.ee
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      191 year ago

      You’re mistaken on the definition of racism. This has nothing to do with race and everything to do with how France deals with secularism

      • TheCaconym [any]
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        541 year ago

        I’m French and actually he’s bang on the money, it’s entirely about racism under the bullshit cover of “secularity”

        • @pedro@lemm.ee
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          81 year ago

          I’m also French and I don’t know, maybe you’re right and that’s a way to hide the real racist motives. I’m probably biased because I dislike all religions equally though

          • GarbageShoot [he/him]
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            501 year ago

            I’m an antitheist and, speaking as one, let me request that you pull your head out of whatever it is stuck in. France is notoriously Islamophobic and these are girls who are just wearing loose-fitting clothes because of a religious practice based on modesty. Is either the religion or the practice itself above critique? Certainly not, but forcing people not to do something so harmless is ridiculous religious discrimination.

          • What_Religion_R_They [none/use name]
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            371 year ago

            Dislike all religions equally… blah blah blah… some religions more equally than others blah blah

            Maybe think of the outcome of your country’s rightism instead of being so preoccupied with sticking it to the religions very-intelligent

            • @NuPNuA@lemm.ee
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              81 year ago

              When did the far left become so pro-religon? Back when I used to go to punk shows as a teen, the far left were militantly atheist.

              • @Devorlon@lemmy.zip
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                21 year ago

                There’s a difference between not believing in a religion and not wanting the views of religion forced apon you. (secularism)

                Vs.

                Banning all religious symbolism. (Fascism)

                • @NuPNuA@lemm.ee
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                  51 year ago

                  I think fascism is a bit far unless they’re banning the religon at all and are investigating people at home or closing mosques.

      • aaaaaaadjsf [he/him, comrade/them]
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        1 year ago

        Yeah, everything to do with secularism. That’s why France has Christian public holidays. And Macron called for closer ties between the state and Catholic church, and said Europe has “Judeo Christian roots”. Oh wait…

        • @pedro@lemm.ee
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          01 year ago

          Again, this is not racism. There are white Muslims and black christians everywhere in France

            • Echo Dot
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              31 year ago

              It sounds like they’re not saying that Muslims are not allowed to practise their religion. They’re just not allowed to do it in school, but no one’s allowed to practise their religion in school apparently so not it’s not racist.

              • Harrison [He/Him]
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                1 year ago

                “The law in it’s great magnanimity prohibits poor and rich alike from sleeping under bridges and stealing bread.”.

                A law can be applied equally to everyone and still target a specific group of people.

          • Adkml [he/him]
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            291 year ago

            Ok it’s a slightly different form of bigotry does that make it ok since your only argument seems to be “it’s not racism because it doesn’t explicitly say it’s discriminating against a specific race”

          • @Landrin201@lemmy.ml
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            51 year ago

            No, it has Christian roots. I’m Jewish, and I hate the term “Judeo-christian.” We do not believe the same things, and we do not share the same history. Christians have been persecuting us for well over a thousand years, they’ve driven us out of our homes, murdered us en-masse multiple times in multiple different countries in multiple different centuries, and have refused to give us any respect and dignity until after World War 2, when it became politically convenient for them to do so.

            Our values are different, our history is different, the only thing we have in common is that the Christians read our bible sometimes when it’s convenient for them to cite it to reinforce their intolerance.

            • @loutr@sh.itjust.works
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              -21 year ago

              Fair enough, though one could also see it at recognizing the Jewish roots of the christian religion. And I genuinely believe that the holocaust and general hardships endured during WW2 bought the Jewish people a fair amount of goodwill, it’s not all cynical political calculations.

              • @Landrin201@lemmy.ml
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                It got us so much good will that the French still ban us from wearing religious garments in public, and antisemitic attacks across Europe have been increasing steadily for at least 20 years, with governments seemingly unable to do anything about it.

                If you “recognize your roots” but changed your name and also have spent your entire lifetime attempting to murder your parents and grandparents, I think it’s fair to say that you don’t respect or care about your roots.

                • @loutr@sh.itjust.works
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                  01 year ago

                  the French still ban us from wearing religious garments in public

                  This is completely wrong. You are legally free to wear a kippa or any other religious signs almost everywhere in France. Exceptions are:

                  • in public schools
                  • at work if:
                    • you’re a civil servant
                    • there is a legitimate reason for a ban (security, hygiene, …)

                  That’s literally it. I lived in a Jewish neighborhood in Paris and saw kippas constantly, nobody gave a fuck.

                  If you “recognize your roots” but changed your name and also have spent your entire lifetime attempting to murder your parents and grandparents, I think it’s fair to say that you don’t respect or care about your roots.

                  OK?

      • Tankiedesantski [he/him]
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        What’s even the point of this line of argument? At best you prove that this technically isn’t racism in the strictest definitional sense but it’s still just as harmful to kids and Muslims as racism.

          • Tankiedesantski [he/him]
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            131 year ago

            Actually, I shot everyone in that refugee camp regardless of religion so I didn’t do genocide, just ordinary everyday mass murder smuglord.

            This was an actual argument that was run in one of the Yugoslav tribunals BTW.

        • axont [she/her, comrade/them]
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          221 year ago

          I don’t think you could define this as strictly not racist, since “race” constitutes arbitrary characteristics decided upon largely by white hegemony. It’s how Africans became a singular black race despite being different cultures and language groups. It’s why Jews are sometimes white, sometimes not.

          It’s absolutely why most Americans consider a native Spanish speaker a different race, no matter how white they are. We’re in a moment where being Muslim is a racial marker excluding a person from whiteness.

          Here’s a trick I do. Go show an uniformed white American a picture of Bashar al-Assad. Every time I’ve done this, they’ll say he’s a white guy. Then tell them he’s the president of Syria and a Muslim. They instantly flip.

        • nudny ekscentryk
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          11 year ago

          Well, yes. “Hating Mexicans” is not racism. Just like hating the French, Poles, or Americans. It’s nationalism, xenophobia, chauvinism etc, but not racism

      • CyborgMarx [any, any]
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        321 year ago

        Religion in France is racialized as it is in most parts of the world, pretending otherwise is just a denial of reality and history, the French state couldn’t care less for secularism on its own merits, it only cares about religion in the context of the eternal “immigrant” communities who it refuses to actually integrate because of the continuous French colonial mindset and a 19th century conception of frenchness which is centered around white pan-europeanism

        If secularism was the point, the french state would have launched a social crusade against the Catholic church decades ago

        It’s not a coincidence the law was implemented in 2004 at the height of the war on terror

        • @Gsus4@feddit.nl
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          I think you’re underestimating how aggressive french laicity originally had to be to extract a church that was entrenched deep within government and culture and felt entitled to exert more ultraconservative political influence than it is today:

          https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1905_French_law_on_the_Separation_of_the_Churches_and_the_State

          In 1886, another law ensured secularisation of the teaching staff of the National Education.[10][11]

          Other moves towards secularism included:

          the introduction of divorce and a requirement that civil marriages be performed in a civil ceremony[12]

          legalizing work on Sundays[13][14]

          making seminarians subject to conscription[14][15]

          secularising schools and hospitals[8][12]

          abolishing the law ordaining public prayers at the beginning of each parliamentary session and of the assizes[14][16]

          ordering soldiers not to frequent Catholic clubs[17]

          removing the religious character from the judicial oath and religious symbols from courtrooms[18]

          forbidding the participation of the armed forces in religious processions[14]

        • @Gsus4@feddit.nl
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          11 year ago

          It’s not a coincidence the law was implemented in 2004 at the height of the war on terror

          Which law?

      • ShimmeringKoi [comrade/them]
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        311 year ago

        Oh cool, looking forward to this rehashing of the 2017 era “Islam isn’t a race, therefore islamophobia has no connection to racism” rhetoric.

      • usernamesaredifficul [he/him]
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        secular means not taking a religious stance and being neutral about it. Being secular would mean letting people wear them as they choose not allowing people to wear religious attire is taking a religious stance and thus isn’t secular

        rather than secularity this is religious persecution

        • nudny ekscentryk
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          21 year ago

          No, secularism is about people having the freedom of religion. Being forced by family or peers to wear religious clothing is incompatible with freedom of religion.

        • @fibojoly@sh.itjust.works
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          91 year ago

          Religion is a private matter. When you start spreading it all over the place, then no, it has no place in school or in our (France) society in general.
          I was the victim of this attitude when I was a teen and my family wanted me to follow our religion and yet I still agree with this attitude. My main beef wasn’t with the institution but with how specific teachers decided to deal with me. Ultimately I got over religion, and hopefully some of those kids will, too.

      • @NuPNuA@lemm.ee
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        31 year ago

        Firstly, Religon is a choice, nothing about your skin tone or where you were born scientifically dictates you must follow a Religon.

        Secondly, this applies to all religions in France, it’s just that one particular religion takes their costumes a bit more seriously than others so it seems like they’re being singled out.

  • @Wahots@pawb.social
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    “Since 2004, in France, religious signs and symbols have been banned in schools, including headscarves, kippas and crosses,”

    I agree with it, not in the “hah, we are dunking on minorities” way, but just because I’m personally so sick of religion being a part of every waking moment of life and being used as a cudgel to influence public policy, media, and what choices people can make when it comes to important personal choices, such as healthcare. Of course, this is being viewed through my American lens, but we’ve seen similar erosions in public institutions due to so-called “religious rights” despite being a secular country. While France’s version is fairly blunt, it seeks to normalize and equalize everyone, which I think is a decent goal.

    If it wasn’t religion, I’m positive it would be something else. But I think it’s very healthy to maintain separation of religion while at public institutions, particularly in a world where religious extremism is on the rise.

    • bane_killgrind
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      141 year ago

      France is fairly blunt in most ways.

      When you come to live in France, you are french. If you don’t consider yourself french, you are just a tourist.

      This is my interpretation of the attitude my French friends have.

        • @maporita@unilem.org
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          11 year ago

          Then they should move elsewhere. When you immigrate to a country it’s on you to conform. I as a gay man would never consider moving to a Muslim country where my lifestyle is rejected. If otters feel their values don’t align with secularism then don’t come here.

          • @ExLisper@linux.community
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            71 year ago

            Yes, they should but relocating is expensive and after couple of decades of discrimination most of them are not very rich. France brought them from their colonies (not literally of course they they put their immigration policy in place because they actually wanted immigrants) and then bocked all opportunities from them. Now they are shocked that migrants are not happy living as second class citizens…

          • I am glad other gay men think the same way I am.

            I am all for tolerance and acceptance, but not of opposition, religion extremists and sexism.

      • lol no. Youre french when they can put you on a pedestal for how becoming french has helped you achieve something. But god forbid you do something that is not considered favorable by the french. Then you are an immigrant and you being an immigrant is the cause of all

    • @Pipoca@lemmy.world
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      21 year ago

      The people this affects the most aren’t the people using religion as a cudgel.

      Which isn’t to say that e.g. orthodox Jews and Muslims don’t wield religion as a cudgel when they have the opportunity - just look at East Ramapo NY or Israel. But they don’t have any kind of broad institutional power in the US or France.

      In the US, the big problem is dominionist Christianity, and there’s no religious requirement for them to wear something in particular.

    • @bouh@lemmy.world
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      -61 year ago

      Laicity is tolerance. What’s happening currently is the opposite of tolerance. It’s extremism the same as the most zealous fanatics, it’s merely fascist zeal instead of religious zeal.

  • @Anonbal185@aussie.zone
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    401 year ago

    It’s France they’re very xenophobic. Just look at how they treat the Corsicans, Brentons, Basques and Catalans.

    Night and day to even a few hundred metres across the road in Spain or Andorra.

    • Echo Dot
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      171 year ago

      I’m not saying France isn’t racist because they absolutely are but this doesn’t seem like that this seems like applying the same rules to everyone equally.

      Just going by the article.

      • @Pipoca@lemmy.world
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        A law that requires everyone to eat bacon would apply to everyone equally, but it’s still antisemitic and islamophobic.

        • @variaatio@sopuli.xyz
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          However I would note… France has rule about no crosses or cross wearing in schools. So it isn’t like Islam is being singled out. Well this specific rule is about them, but France has very wide rule of “no religious clothing, items or symbols” in school and they don’t much pick sides. Jewish kids… No kippas, Protestants and Catholics, no crosses, Muslims, no head scrafs, no face veils, no religious robes. Sikhs, no turbans.

          So it isn’t xenophobic, since the local majority religion is also under rules of “no religious symbols wearing”.

          What one can say is, that it is highly anti-religious. However that isn’t same thing as xenophobic or say specifically antisemitic or islamophobic. Islamophobic would be “Muslim girls aren’t allowed to wear scarfs, but it’s okay for catholic girls to wear crosses”.

          French government “doesn’t like” the local traditional majority religion either.

          One absolutely can argue about “is it too much restriction of religious liberty in general”, however one can’t argue “well but this is about jews or muslims”. It isn’t. This specific rule about abayas is mostly a technocratic decision based on wider political decision of “we have principle of no religious displays in school”. It was decided “oh yeah, we missed this one religious clothing wearing/display. Add it to the long list of specified banned religious displays of all kinds”.

          I’m sure, if member of the church of the flying spaghetti monster tried to walk to French school with colander on their head, the courts would rule "no colander hats either, that is religious display also. You can go join the Jewish and Sikhs on the club house of “France banned our religious hat” club.

          • @Pipoca@lemmy.world
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            01 year ago

            So it isn’t xenophobic, since the local majority religion is also under rules of “no religious symbols wearing”.

            However, does the local majority religion mandate wearing a religious symbol?

            Wearing a cross doesn’t seem akin in significance to wearing a turban or a kippah. From what I understand, it’s more of just a Christian fashion statement than a deep part of the religion.

            So yes, this seems quite xenophobic to do something that’s a mild annoyance at worst for the dominant religion and a major issue for minority religions.

            • Echo Dot
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              41 year ago

              I suppose the French government would argue that really isn’t their problem. And it isn’t.

              They have a rule that has been standing for a long time and is simply been enforced, it’s the individual religions who dictate how severely they see this.

          • @DrownedAxolotl@lemmy.ml
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            31 year ago

            Absolutely sexist. I’m honestly kind of dumbfounded by the number of people opposing this. France has done some stupid shit recently, but they are absolutely in the right here.

      • Pankkake
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        81 year ago

        this seems like applying the same rules to everyone equally

        Though it can seem fair, applying the same rules to everyone equally can be very racist.

    • @loutr@sh.itjust.works
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      11 year ago

      That’s rich coming from you, assuming you’re Australian :) How are we mistreating them exactly? I live in Nantes, Breton culture is everywhere, street signs are translated in Breton, there are bilingual schools… They don’t seem very oppressed to me.

      • @Anonbal185@aussie.zone
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        51 year ago

        Well let’s start.

        In Spain the medium of instruction can be and is set by the regional government. Catalan, Basque, Occitian and Galician is used extensively as a medium of instruction in public schools (fully funded by the government)

        There’s extensive media which includes government owned media in those languages. And for government services you can ask for someone to speak to you in those languages.

        The languages are promoted and are co-official. I have friends from Galicia and have been there.

        • @loutr@sh.itjust.works
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          OK, good for them I guess? But the regional language and culture thing is a much different and bigger issue in Spain.

          Anyway, speakers of regional languages are not repressed in France. There are bilingual schools, newspapers and cultural associations which are partially funded by the state. Things might not be perfect, but I’ve never heard of anyone having to hide their regional origin for fear of repercussions, or discriminated against because of it. Those are things I personally experienced in Australia BTW.

      • Arkarian
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        111 year ago

        Basque here. Yes.

        We have our own parliament and laws (like all the autonomous communities) and police. Basque, Catalan and Galician are official languages, and they now can be used in the Spanish Congress too.

        Obc not everything is perfect, but that can be said of everything. You can’t compare that with a centralist country as france.

      • @Anonbal185@aussie.zone
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        Whether they do or not isn’t really the question. Can more be done? Yes of course. But Catalan, Occitian, Basque and Galician is co-official which affords them use as a medium of instruction, media usage, can ask for services from the government in those languages etc. How’s France doing for those points?

        And more importantly Spain has changed in the past 50 years. Keep in mind even half a century ago Spain was the same as France in terms of repressing cultures. France well, it’s still the same.

  • Cyclohexane
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    261 year ago

    As someone who comes from Muslim upbringing, I am 100% against face veils and abayas. But this is very clearly racist. Those girls are the victims, so why punish them even further? France is such a fascist place.

    • TheCaconym [any]
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      311 year ago

      You are correct, this is part of a series of laws over the past decade specifically aimed at muslims in France, and it indeed issues from racism

      But also:

      Those girls are the victims

      lmao, wearing an abaya is not “being a victim”, it’s a fucking dress

      How about just letting the girls wear whatever the fuck they want to wear

      • usernamesaredifficul [he/him]
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        201 year ago

        I never understood the depth of feeling over this.

        In the west there are laws about public indecency which legislate what people may wear outside and these rules demand women wear shirts but do not demand the same of men. We therefore categorically do not culturally believe in the absolute freedom of a person to wear what they will and in fact are arguing a position of where the line is on acceptable dress

        • Harrison [He/Him]
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          121 year ago

          In the west there are laws about public indecency which legislate what people may wear outside and these rules demand women wear shirts but do not demand the same of men.

          In some western countries, there are ones that do not make a distinction

        • Nationalgoatism [any]
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          31 year ago

          In the west there are laws about public indecency which legislate what people may wear outside and these rules demand women wear shirts but do not demand the same of men.

          Such laws are categorically reactionary and misogynistic, and we should obviously oppose them

          • usernamesaredifficul [he/him]
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            41 year ago

            so if you’re in a mcDonalds you think that a man should just be able to show anyone his dick then because that’s what a lack of public indecency laws would entail

            • Nationalgoatism [any]
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              31 year ago

              I was mostly referring to laws setting different requirements for men and women’s clothing in public. However I grew up in a place where it was not unheard of to walk down the street completely naked. It was just something some people did. So I will say that there is a big difference between being naked and deliberately trying to flash your genitals.

      • @socsa@lemmy.ml
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        21 year ago

        Man, the underlying philosophy of hexbear tankies really is hard to pin down. You defend it when China’s leader gets up and says batshit crazy stuff like “we need to focus on the sinofication of islam,” but you don’t like it when France says “we don’t want religion in schools.”

        It almost feels like that underlying philosophy is “west bad.”

        • Cyclohexane
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          61 year ago

          Wearing a hijab or abaya is not “bringing religion into school”. It is bringing a person with whatever they always dress in outside into school. They are not trying to convert people or loudly calling for prayer in a disruptive manner. They are simply existing.

    • sooper_dooper_roofer [none/use name]
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      1 year ago

      dude it’s literally a fucking scarf. you are saying you’re against people wearing scarves

      I am AGAINST women wearing JEANS AND T SHIRTS because they are being OPPRESSED into NOT SHOWING more of their skin in a WONDERFUL and MISOGYNY-FREE alternative such as a BIKINI or THONG

      • Cyclohexane
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        51 year ago

        I am not against the abaya itself. I am against women or girls being coerced into any kind of clothing. Unfortunately, most girls wearing abayas are coerced by their families. But again, I am against France coercing clothing onto girls too. What they do is even worse.

      • @Pipoca@lemmy.world
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        81 year ago

        Uniform rules don’t always affect everyone uniformly. It’s really not hard to create uniform laws that disproportionately target a particular group.

        For example, North Dakota passed a law that required Voter ID with a residential street address on it. However, many Native Americans living on tribal land in the state didn’t have a residential street address.. Most people in the state who lived in a house that didn’t have an address lived on a reservation. The law was clearly racist and specifically designed to depress the Native American vote for partisan gain, yet used the same rules for everyone to do so.

      • @gnuhaut@lemmy.ml
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        41 year ago

        Weird how in practice this seems to only affect one group of people. Weird how all the bigots seem love this. But this couldn’t be the reason for this, could it? Who would ever try to exploit the widespread Islamophobia in France to gain popularity and distract from real problems?

        • @luk3th3dud3@feddit.de
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          61 year ago

          From what I understand, this affects everyone. All religious symbols are banned from school. I do not know what the rest of your murmuring has to do with the specific topic.

          • because the Abaya is not a religious symbol. It is a long dress that is worn for religious reasons, in this case to not reveal too much of the body. So if they want to ban this religious “symbol” then they need to ban all clothes that arent very revealing.

            • @luk3th3dud3@feddit.de
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              41 year ago

              Yes of course, it is just a piece of clothing. A piece of clothing that women are forced to wear in public in the women’s rights loving state of saudi arabia. It is not about very revealing clothing, you are intentionally missing the point here. It is specifically about this piece of religious clothing.

              • You are wrong. There is no forcing of women to wear an abaya in saudi arabia. they are forced to wear clothes that arent revealing, but it is not specific to this kind of clothing.

                Also it is a weird flex to say that it is good to force women to wear certain clothing because saudi arabia forces them to wear different clothing. You still end up forcing women to wear or not to wear certain things, taking away their liberty.

                Again it is not a religious symbol because it is not defined by the religion, unlike the robe of a priest, the cross or the head scarf.

                If you want to ban the underlying “symbol” of not wearing revealing clothing, youd need to ban all clothing that does that and not just the abaya. But they wont do that because they are bigoted hypocrites.

      • autismdragon [he/him, they/them]
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        421 year ago

        Is this a “Islam isnt a race” thing or? Because the these types of laws in France are very clearly targetted towards Muslims and in the west Muslims have been heavily racialized. Races are made up categories so anything can be a race if its treated like one, and muslims are treated like one.

        Also France might not technically be “a fascist country” but it has a lot of fascist policies and this would be one.

  • @Armen12@lemm.ee
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    261 year ago

    I don’t want religion in schools, outside that, you’re still free to practice what you want, but keep religion out of education. France got this one right

    • qyron
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      201 year ago

      Only that is not.

      Crucifixes and other outter religious symbols are facing the same restriction.

      For what reason a particular creed holds such tight restrictions on what garments are considered adequate over others evades.

      This is a quite harsh way to impose a rule but it is a fair one. No one is being denied education. This is “keep your beliefs to yourself and do not impose it onto others”.

      • the Abaya is just a long wide cut dress. They are banning girls from wearing long dresses, because these are popular with muslims. If the girls decide to wear hoodies now to be conservative about what they show of their body it would need to be banned by that logic too. Basically anything that is not skin tight hot pants and crop tops should be banned because it might be worn by muslim girls to adhere to their religious values.

        This ruling has nothing to do with actual secular values. It is just to discriminate against muslim children.

        • qyron
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          41 year ago

          Tailored to specifications dictated by an unquestionable authority or are the abaya user free to order the garment to be tailored to their personal specific taste?

          Because to what I can gather it is supposed to be used as a form to preserve modesty, which implies simplicity and discretion.

          Flowing, straight cut dresses are not exclusive to the muslim world.

        • @Afiefh@lemmy.world
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          41 year ago

          And crosses are just lines meeting at right angles. And purity rings are just small cylinders. We don’t ban any cylinder or lines meeting at right angles. You’re making a sad attempt at a slippery slope argument.

          • i didnt say they are banned. but by the pretended logic behind the ban they would need to ban hoodies too. Which shows that the law is not aimed at enforcing secularism but at discriminating muslims. Most likely to appease the far right.

          • @Lhianna@feddit.de
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            41 year ago

            According to German news (source) girls already had to defend their choice of wearing an oversized sweater and long skirt. That’s going way too far in regulation in my opinion.

      • @gnuhaut@lemmy.ml
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        11 year ago

        “Ackshually, technically, totally fair.” This clearly only affects this one group of people in practice. The law was obviously made to garner the bigot vote and distract from the incredibly unpopular shit this government is pulling. This “technically” shit is only deflection. I mean it works great on people who are Islamophobic but don’t actually want to admit that to themselves. Plausible deniability.

        impose it onto others

        How are these children “imposing” anything onto others? You see one abaya, and now you’re forced to accept Mohammed as your prophet? Do you know what “impose” means? You used it correctly just two sentences before that.

        • qyron
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          -11 year ago

          “Ackshually, technically, totally fair.”

          Want to throw “mansplaining” and “neckbeard” there too? Seems to be missing to finish the bouquet.

          This clearly only affects this one group of people in practice. The law was obviously made to garner the bigot vote and distract from the incredibly unpopular shit this government is pulling. This “technically” shit is only deflection. I mean it works great on people who are Islamophobic but don’t actually want to admit that to themselves. Plausible deniability.

          Could not care any less. By definition, I uphold that no creed, whatsoever, deserves special treatment. And fascism is the hot buzzer nowadays: everything and everyone is a fascist nowadays, the moment they are not willing to concede by default on any given point.

          The abaya is an outter sign of religiosity, usually imposed to women that come from muslim backgrounds or go into it. It is not a fashion statement or personal style: it’s forced differentiation that no one has to respect or endure.

          Have the girls and women have a say on what they use, not a father, or male relative or a religious figure nor a so called sacred book.

          impose it onto others

          How are these children “imposing” anything onto others? You see one abaya, and now you’re forced to accept Mohammed as your prophet? Do you know what “impose” means? You used it correctly just two sentences before that.

          Inadvertantly answered to this point above but I’ll expand a little more.

          Personally speaking, which makes the following an anecdote, which by the force of argument engagement voids it of validity, I actually find quite beautiful the elaborate embroidery and decorations the traditional northern Africa and Turkish garments can sport. I find it lavish, elaborate and just beautiful. The art and work put into it is fabulous. But this same elaborate work is usually absent in the abayas and other “traditional” muslim associated garments we usually see in Europe, which are often bland, in drab colors. Why?

          If it is about defending culture, which is the default argument, why aren’t those traditional garments sewn and used here, where they could even contribute to counter the prêt-à-porter seasonal discardable fashion? Make an actual contribution to the local culture and enrich it.

      • @bouh@lemmy.world
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        -71 year ago

        That is blatantly wrong! What’s banned is the sign in the room, from the teacher, a representative of the state.

        Only Muslim get to get new laws to ban any sign of their religion. Cross pendant were never banned. Scarfs were only banned when Muslim wear them.

        Keep your beliefs to yourself should apply to fascists too.

        • @Honytawk@lemmy.zip
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          81 year ago

          No, every religious sign is banned.

          Christians are just less of an arse when it comes to those symbols. They either stop wearing it or hide it under clothes.

          But if a Christian came in wearing a hat with a cross on top, they would also get send home.

          Same with orthodox Jews. They need to hide their payot or will be send home.

          If you can’t handle secularism in education, don’t go live in a secular country.

          • @Pipoca@lemmy.world
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            51 year ago

            How exactly do you hide sideburns?

            If they wear a hat to put them under, it’d probably be interpreted as a religious head covering and they’d be sent home anyways.

            Christians are just less of an arse when it comes to those symbols.

            That’s like saying that Christians are less of an arse when it comes to religious dietary rules. It’s just not a part of their religion in the same way that not proselytizing is a part of Judaism.

            Honestly, as someone who grew up in the US, Christian proselytizers are orders of magnitude worse than the modern orthodox kid in school who wore a kippah.

          • @bouh@lemmy.world
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            21 year ago

            That’s not secularism, that’s authoritarianism. I wish my country wasn’t becoming fascist.

          • @gnuhaut@lemmy.ml
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            01 year ago

            So Christians are just less annoying than Muslims? And they should leave if they don’t like it here?

            Spoken like a true bigot. And you were trying so hard to convince others it’s got nothing to do with Islamophobia. Just can’t stop yourself, can you?

        • qyron
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          41 year ago

          I’m a little south of France, secularism and laicism are built into our constituion and we still have a rather fresh memroy of what fascism was and did to our people and country.

          Public school is to be non confessional, which implies you keep your personal beliefs private.

          The best parallel I can find to the muslim code of dress would be the monastic dressing of catholic orders. It is not optional, it’s enforced. But unlike the muslim dress code, the monastic dressing implies you are away from the common world 90% of your time and you actively and willingly chose that way of life.

          Who would care if a muslim was to go every now and then dressed in their religious attire? It would be a personal choice, perhaps something moved the individual to dress that way on a given day as they felt fragile for a loss or some other reason where they felt the need to seek comfort in their belief. But mandated out of oppression, because women tempt men and thus need to be modest? That is saying that men are forever children (and by default stupid) and force women into a perpetual motherhood, from birth.

          Catholics carry their cross around their necks but can easily tuck inside their clothes. Jewish men can fold and keep their head cover in a pocket (do women have any equivalent?). And so on and so forth.

          • @bouh@lemmy.world
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            21 year ago

            I am French, I know very well how it works. Laws that tell people how they can dress are not secularist, they are authoritarian. Removing children from school because they aren’t dress correctly is not secularism, it’s authoritarian.

            France is becoming fascist, that’s all there is to see here.

            • qyron
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              01 year ago

              Isn’t it in Cannes that beach goers cannot be by the boardwalk without their shirts?

              I remember seeing a news cover where a man, sitting on the dividind wall without a shirt, was acosted by the police and eventually walked to the police station.

              Is that fascism as well?

              I think it’s exaggerated but the reasoning behind the ordnance was enforcing common social etiquette/decorum.

              Do I agree with the principle behind this? No. But there should be no need to enforce basic social norms because one creed understands itself as being above all norms that are not perscribed by a book cobbled together from oral narrations, 600 or 800 years ago.

              Religious belief does not deserve special treatment from the law.

              Anyone from any non muslim country faces similar or worst impositions when settling on such a nation; “tolerated” is not “accepted”.

              • @bouh@lemmy.world
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                21 year ago

                You can generalize as much you like it’s irrelevant. The matter at hand is that a law is 1) telling women how to dress and 2) fucking with Muslims.

                The irony is that these dresses are deemed “too modest”.

                Also, what happen in a Muslim theocracy is completely irrelevant. We’re talking about France policy. France doesn’t have to become fascist just because theocracies are fascists. That’s not how it works.

                • qyron
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                  -11 year ago

                  You’re in your right to dislike or disagree of my arguments. Could not care any less.

                  The law is, to what I can gather, telling any and all religious confessions that no outter signs are tolerated in the school space. If the halfwit of the minister that divulged focused on the muslim attire, they are either idiots or aiming at picking up dirt to snuff some other event.

                  I wonder if this thread would have garnered so much attention if instead of muslim women the event would have had involved jewish male teens and their sideburns.

                  My parallel with the muslim nations was not to excuse a so called “fascist” imposition from the french government to cull religious zealotry but to remind what that same zealory aspires to have in nations where the creed is minoritary: total, complete, absolute and inquestionable control over people’s lives, including what they can or not wear.

          • @Pipoca@lemmy.world
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            11 year ago

            Catholics carry their cross around their necks but can easily tuck inside their clothes. Jewish men can fold and keep their head cover in a pocket (do women have any equivalent?).

            Are catholics religiously obligated to wear crosses at all times? Reform and conservative Jews only wear kippot while praying, but orthodox Jews wear them all the time and consider it to be an obligation to wear one all the time.

            Do you also require orthodox Jewish and Muslim children to eat pork and shellfish in school lunches, and appreciate how flexible catholic parents are about letting their kids violate the kosher or halal rules?

            • qyron
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              -21 year ago

              Nowadays, I think it depends on who you ask.

              Growing in a somewhat religious family, it was never a mandatory item to carry, although it was a common sight on both men and womens jewelry, usually made out of gold or silver.

              Today I find it increasingly common to see more devout church goers using crucifixes or even rosary beads around their necks.

              So… it depends?

              Dietary difference is not on the table to discuss; it’s a non subject. Many people have differentiated diets for multiple reasons besides a given creed.

              And if the law stipulates that an animal must be slaughtered by a means that guarantees the least possible suffering, then the law is actually pushing aside religious precept over objective benefit.

              If my memory serves me well enough, jewish and muslim slaughtering involves slicing the carothide artery to allow the animal to bleed out, which is a slow and stressful death. In my very own barbaric country, that is considered cruelty.

              Although not a vegan or vegetarian, I find distasteful the image of an animal slowly fading away as it bleeds to the ground, when a more humane method os available.

            • @Landrin201@lemmy.ml
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              111 year ago

              It’s so funny to me that so many people in this thread are like “well technically it also applies to christians wearing crosses! So it isn’t discriminatory.” I guarantee you that a kid wearing a cross won’t get in any trouble for it, they certainly won’t be sent home. They’d probably be asked to hide it better and let off by the teacher, if anything at all was said.

              These kinds of laws are classic examples of laws that are deliberately targeted at specific groups, but worded in a way which technically makes them apply to everyone, with the intent that enforcement will not target the group it wasn’t supposed to.

              • usernamesaredifficul [he/him]
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                61 year ago

                also Christianity doesn’t have a commandment about people wearing crosses at all times so it’s not an equivalent ask to not wear a cross