Thanks to Katie for posting this link in the comments in response to the video clip about the girl in Spain being asked to remove her hegab.
SRBICA, Serbia - Three students were suspended from school in Kosovo this week for wearing Muslim headscarves, reflecting a debate that is echoing across Europe and complicating the province's quest for independence.
The argument over whether secular society should trump religious rights is similar to those taking place in France, Turkey, Britain and elsewhere.
But some in the breakaway Serb province fear its bid for statehood could suffer if Kosovo is perceived as overly Islamic.
"Not only does religion damage the quest for independence, it damages our entire concept," said Rexhep Ismajli, the head of Kosovo's Academy of Science, a body that includes the province's leading thinkers. "It damages Kosovo's society, it damages our vision."
Fatmire Jashari, 18, was suspended from her high school in the central Kosovar town of Srbica — a former stronghold of the now-disbanded Kosovo Liberation Army, the guerrilla group that fought Serb forces in the 1998-1999 war.
"I hope I won't be pushed to choose between the two," she said. "But if I am, I will choose the headscarf."
Another girl in Fatmire's school and a student in a different school were also suspended this week.
Kosovo's majority ethnic Albanians are mostly Muslim, although they are largely secular. The province's governmental institutions, which are supervised by a United Nations administration, are careful not to associate themselves with Islam, fearing that a strong Muslim identity could harm the province's quest for independence from Serbia, a predominantly Orthodox Christian country.
Some countries in Europe remain hesitant to accede to the ethnic Albanian majority's demands for independence, and analysts in Kosovo have raised concerns that this skepticism is due in part to Kosovo's Islamic heritage.
Western intelligence reports have suggested that Muslim-dominated regions in Bosnia and Kosovo could be recruitment grounds for the so-called "white al-Qaida" — Muslims with Western features who could blend into European or U.S. cities and execute terrorist attacks.
Meanwhile, the debate over what kind of country Kosovo will be — if it becomes a country — continues.
"It was easy to proclaim adherence to the democratic principles of the West in during the repression of the Serb regime," said Dukagjin Gorani, an ethnic Albanian commentator. "But when the West actually came to Kosovo, people started going to mosques. This will not necessarily make Kosovo a religious state, but it will certainly start a heated debate on what it should be."
Original article found here.
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5 comments:
Hello, Cairogal!
Thanks for posting, very good!
Have a goo day
Interesting. I would think tha ban on headscarves is a bit selective.
I have been in Bosnia and I can tell you some Serb women wear it as well, although it looks a bit different and it usually the older/married women who do so.
Hmmmm....this is a complicated issue. How do you feel about it?
Thanks for posting this, Cairogal.
It is a huge topic and even having lived in Sarajevo 2+ years I don't feel so qualified to comment. (but I will!)
I wonder if like in Turkey (?), the ban in Kosovo actually comes from Kosovo authorities - the status is complicated but there are Kosovo as opposed to Serbian authorities still.
I think the impression of many Kosovars that one of the reasons for Europe's slow reaction to the situation is based on the Islamic heritage is correct, unfortunately. This is of course my opinion and I don't know that anyone is in a position to say it definitely is or is not the case.
As was brought up in the other post - about people electing to cover up as a symbolic thing to show some difference...I suppose it could be. As far as I understand, it happens more frequently now than before the wars in the region, and I don't think it is that surprising that people who were targeted for their ethnicity/religion end up identifying with it.
Welcome, David!
Not having been to the region, I can't comment on this w/ anything more than my general opinion on the topic. The woman who said she would choose the veil over school...I think this is a WWMD x (What would Mohamed do?) moment. Would he have counseled a young woman to choose the headscarf over schooling? I would say that if she was prevented from fulfilling one of the five pillars of Islam, then I would understand her religious conviction. I don't think any woman should "have to" choose between wearing a headscarf and school, but if it were my daughter, I would expect her to place her education first. Education is power and the springboard to social change. Dropping out of school will not yield anything productive in terms of this young woman's cause and religious conviction.
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