Outrage as Quebec teacher removed from classroom for wearing hijab
Fatemeh Anvari was told her headwear ran afoul of Bill 21, which bars some public servants from wearing religious symbols
The removal of a Canadian teacher for wearing a hijab in the classroom has sparked widespread condemnation of a controversial law in the province of Quebec, which critics say unfairly targets ethnic minorities under the pretext of secularism.
Fatemeh Anvari, a third-grade teacher in the town of Chelsea, was told earlier this month that she would no longer be allowed to continue in the role because her headwear ran afoul of Bill 21, a law passed in 2019.
Under the measure, public servants in âpositions of authorityâ â including police officers, lawyers, judges, bus drivers, doctors, social workers and teachers â are barred from wearing religious symbols such as turbans, kippahs and hijabs.
But the law has an outsized impact on Muslim women and in schools in the province, where 74.5% of teachers are women.
âThis is not about my article of clothing. This is a bigger issue ⊠I donât want this to be a personal thing because that wonât do any good to anyone,â Anvari told CTV News. âI want this to be something in which we all think about how big decisions affect other lives.â
Anvariâs dismissal has prompted protests at her school, where students and staff put up green ribbons and posters in support of her.
The decision to remove Anvari from the classroom, and to reassign her to a literacy project on diversity and inclusion, has also led to frustration from federal politicians.
On Monday, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said no one should lose their job because of their religion â but refused to intervene, saying he didnât want to create a fight between Quebec and the federal government.
Trudeau said it was important âto ensure that it is Quebecers themselves who deeply disagree with the fact that someone can lose their job because of their religionâ.
New Democratic party leader Jagmeet Singh said Anvariâs abilities as a teacher were never in doubt, but âbecause of the way she looked and they way she dressed, sheâs no longer able to teach these kids. That is everything that is wrong with this bill.â
Conservative MP Kyle Seeback described Anvariâs dismissal as âan absolute disgraceâ.
While Conservative leader Erin OâToole said he disagrees with the law, he told reporters he respects provincial jurisdiction and believes Bill 21 is âan issue that is best left for Quebecers to decideâ.
Federal leaders have been wary of angering voters in Quebec by taking too strong a stand against the law.
In Quebec, where the measure has popular support, political leaders defended Bill 21.
âThe reason this teacher doesnât have a job is because she didnât respect the law,â said Pascal BĂ©rubĂ©, the Parti QuĂ©bĂ©coisâs critic on secularism. âThe law is for everyone. She tried to make a statement wearing a hijab.â
Premier Francois Legault called Bill 21 âa reasonable lawâ adding that Anvari should not have been hired in the first place.
Workers hired before March 2019 are still permitted to wear religious symbols at work. But because Anvari became a substitute teaching last spring and signed a new contract in October, she is barred from wearing a hijab in the classroom.
Trudeau has said federal intervention would be unlikely to have much effect, given Quebecâs ability to invoke a constitutional override power known as the ânotwithstanding clauseâ which protects the province from claims that it violates rights protected by Canadaâs Charter of Rights and Freedoms.
English-language schools in the province have fought the law and recently lost a court challenge preventing the bill from going into effect.
SOURCE: The Guardian
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