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27 Jun 2019, 9:16 am

French Muslim women wear burkinis to the pool as an act of protest

Quote:
Some women wear "burkinis," bathing suits that keep them covered while they swim, leaving their hands, feet and faces bare. But many cities across France have banned them.

To protest the bans, Muslim women from Alliance Citoyenne, a group in Grenoble that advocates for social issues, began going to swimming pools in the suits last month as an act of civil disobedience.

Alliance Citoyenne said that its campaign is inspired by the actions of black Americans during the civil rights movement, specifically the use of civil disobedience like the Montgomery bus boycott.

Seven women went to a pool in Grenoble once last month and once this week. The group plans similar protests every Sunday until the rule is changed, Alliance Citoyenne head organizer Adrien Roux said.

Muslim women in France often have difficulty accessing public services because of their hijabs and can't even accompany their children into schools, Roux said.

This year, the French Senate voted to ban religious symbols on school trips, essentially forbidding mothers who wear headscarves from attending. And now that it's summer, children want to go to the pool -- but they can't unless a parent is with them, Roux said. If their mothers are Muslim and wear hijabs, they can't go.
"So they have to deny their religious beliefs and go, or not deny and not go," he said.

A study in January from researchers at Stanford University found that France's 2004 ban on hijabs, Jewish skullcaps and large Christian crosses in public schools had a negative impact on Muslim girls.
Specifically, it reduced their chances of completing high school and affected their ability to succeed in the labor market long term. Further, the researchers argued that the ban reduced assimilation by "casting religion and national identities as incompatible."

Veiled women are often turned away from places that aren't covered under the ban, Roux said. Members of Alliance Citoyenne who were veiled once tried to go bowling but were told they couldn't enter.
"It's illegal, but it still happens," he said.

Roux said that other pool-goers have generally received the women positively and that some people in Grenoble applauded when they arrived in burkinis.

But when the women got out of the pool, there were two police buses waiting for them, Roux said. The women were fined for their actions this month.

The next day, Roux said, the group received racist comments on Facebook, with people saying they don't want Muslim women in France.

Two women who spoke to the media even received threats in their mailboxes, Roux said.

France rigorously enforces secularism. Religious symbols aren't allowed in any publicly owned spaces, like public schools. Even lawmakers aren't allowed to wear religious symbols.

Secularism, "laïcité" in French, is deeply ingrained in French culture.

Its roots lie in the French Revolution, when the people rose up against the both the monarchy and the rich, including the Catholic clergy. The separation of church and state was made into law in 1905 -- almost 100 years after the Revolution.

It's also about allegiance. Many believe that French identity is a person's primary identity and that nothing comes before it.

In 2011, France banned burqas and niqabs, which cover the face, in public spaces. Legislators who supported the law, including then-President Nicolas Sarkozy, said the garments threatened French secularism and were debasing to women.

In 2016, cities across the country banned burkinis. Officials said the bans were in response to terrorism concerns after a man plowed a 20-ton truck across a busy street in Nice, killing 84 people. Though France's highest administrative court later ruled that mayors could not ban burkinis, many cities continue to ban the swimsuits.

In 2014, the European Court of Human Rights upheld France's burqa and niqab ban after two French women were convicted in 2012 for wearing niqabs. Four years later, the United Nations Human Rights Committee said that the ban violates the human rights of Muslim women and risks "confining them to their homes.


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