‘Niqab school is fighting for girls’ equality’, Torygraph claims

In today’s Daily Telegraph, Philip Johnston examines the issues behind the current court case over the right of a young Muslim woman (“X”) to wear the niqab at school. He recounts:

“The head teacher sent X home last autumn when she saw her in a lunch queue dressed in a niqab, which covers the face apart from a slit for the eyes…. She asked the girl to remove the veil before returning to school. But being relatively new, she had not appreciated that X’s three sisters had already passed through the school wearing the niqab. X, therefore, felt aggrieved that she was being treated differently….

“X’s eldest sister – the first to attend – told the court: ‘When I started I was not certain about wearing the niqab. However, having spoken to my parents and religious scholars, I decided that I did want to wear the niqab and began doing so.’ Does that sound to you like a child who arrived at this decision unilaterally through her religious devotions?”

Well, actually, it does. Indeed, Johnston reports that “X’s father said she was not forced to wear the niqab and to do so was her own choice.” But let us allow Johnston to continue:

“The sister started wearing the niqab in 1995. ‘The school and staff were very supportive,’ she said. ‘I was even told I could wear the jilbab as well if I wanted’.”

Good for the school and its staff, I would say, for handling the issue so sensitively. But Johnston lectures us sternly:

“This was the high-point of multiculturalism, that benighted concept now disavowed by its most enthusiastic proponents. Had the school put its foot down then – along with many other public institutions in thrall to a well-intentioned, but ultimately self-defeating, concept – we might not be in the mess we are now. But it was felt to be the right thing to do, even if it exacerbated division and made integration difficult.”

So, did their wearing of the niqab prevent the sisters from integrating? Not according to them. Johnston reports:

“X’s sisters testified that they had never been held back by wearing the niqab. It could be adapted for sports or for science work in the laboratory. It was taken off when there were no male teachers present. They all came through the school with excellent qualifications and all went to university. Two are now working in good jobs, still veiled. They all made friends and felt they had integrated well.”

So, no problem there, then.

All in all, you might think, a pretty good argument in favour of allowing X to continue wearing her niqab at school? Not according to Johnston, who comments that X’s decision was “hardly surprising given her age and the fact that her three sisters had all worn the garment. Yet we now know that the eldest sibling did so only after consulting a religious scholar. And not only did the school do nothing 12 years ago to help her reach a different decision, it actively conspired in an extraordinary piece of gender apartheid carried out in the name of ‘cultural inclusion’.”

Johnston concludes: “this is a case about rights. Not of Muslims to pursue their religion, for they have that freedom already. It is about the right of a 12-year-old girl, living in Britain, to grow up in a world that treats men and women equally.”

Johnston’s arrogance and condescension defy description. His argument is both sexist and racist. In his view, a young Muslim women is incapable of making up her own mind over whether or not to wear the veil, and if she does decide to wear it she must have been pressurised by her family and by older Muslim men. Her decision can therefore be discounted and she must be forced to remove her niqab – all in the interests of imposing upon her Johnston’s narrow, dogmatic, culturally-determined conception of what constitutes “equality”.

‘Violence is inherent in Islam – it is a cult of death’

Violence inherent in IslamThus the headline to an interview with Ayaan Hirsi Ali by David Cohen in today’s London Evening Standard. The strap reads: “Human rights activist Ayaan Hirsi Ali issues a stark warning about the growing threat of Muslim extremism in Britain”. Bullet points under the headline are:

• Islamic faith schools must close • Sharia law could happen here • Multiculturalism has failed • Islam is the new fascism

Cohen tells us: “Having grown up within Islam, Hirsi Ali believes she is uniquely placed to warn the British public that they are living under a ‘great deception’ about the true nature of Islam. ‘They have deceived themselves that the men arrested in the beheading plot last week and the 7/7 bombers are a fringe group of radical Muslims who’ve hijacked Islam and that the majority of Muslims are moderate. But they’re not. The plot to murder Muslim soldiers in the British Army is consistent with the purest teachings of Islam’.”

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Flawed methodology behind Policy Research report

In a letter to the Guardian, Tariq Modood and Ziauddin Sardar question the methodology behind the recent, much-publicised Policy Research report Living Apart Together. They point out:

“The Cabinet Office’s Equality, Diversity and Prejudice Survey 2006, produced by Professors Dominic Abrams and Diane Houston, confirms that out of all social groups Muslims are at a higher risk of stereotypes, prejudice and discrimination on all relevant markers. In this light, we would urge the media to act more responsibly in its dissemination of research on Muslims and Islam.”

The complete version of the Populus poll on which the Policy Exchange report was based is now available online, by the way.

Bin Laden is the true representative of Islam, says Ayaan Hirsi Ali

Yet another interview with Ayaan Hirsi Ali, who states: “Bin Laden defined the world into Muslims and non-Muslims, and these had to either be converted or killed. I asked myself where I stood after I saw the pictures of people jumping out of the World Trade Center. As a Muslim I had to ask if I agreed with that. I was saddened to see Bin Laden’s citations were from the Koran and were consistent with the Islam I grew up with.”

She adds: “The 74 per cent of Muslims under 24 who said in a survey that women should wear the veil and want Sharia law to be introduced have gone for the consistency that Bin Laden offers.”

Asked if she sees any positive sides to Islam, she replies: “That’s like asking if I see positive sides to Nazism…”

Metro, 5 February 2007

For Yusuf Smith’s comments, see Indigo Jo Blogs, 5 February 2007

Tory lies fuel racism

“Tory leader David Cameron has tried to cultivate an image of being a caring and socially liberal kind of guy. But he revealed his true colours with his remarks on multiculturalism, Muslims and immigration this week.

“Cameron began by attacking ‘Muslim extremists’, describing them as the ‘mirror image’ of the fascist British National Party (BNP). What he really means is that Muslims are the main enemy, not the Nazi BNP. This is borne out by the rest of Cameron’s speech, where he echoes the BNP’s racism, attacking multiculturalism as ‘divisive’ and scaremongering over ‘uncontrolled immigration’ – two favourite themes of the fascists.

“Tory think-tanks have also warmed to this theme, attacking young Muslims for becoming ‘politicised’.

“Politicians who pander to anti-immigrant and anti-Muslim sentiment – whether Tory or New Labour – simply fuel the BNP by normalising its racist lies. Cameron’s concern for ‘community cohesion’ is a sham, and his words will lead to more division not less.”

Socialist Worker, 3 February 2007

NUS black students officer defends mainstream Muslim organisations

Ruqayyah CollectorTory attacks on mainstream Muslim organisations are unfounded. Far from promoting separatism or sharia law, organisations such as the Muslim Council of Britain have worked hard to engage the Muslim community with the British political process.

It is telling that while David Cameron attacked both multiculturalism and immigration as causes of division, he had nothing to say about the rising racism that British Muslims have to confront. In comparing Muslim organisations to the fascist British National Party he risks legitimising an organisation that really is committed to separation and division.

Misrepresenting Muslims in this way will do nothing to promote community cohesion or to tackle the terrorist threat.

Ruqayyah Collector NUS black students officer

Letter in the Guardian, 1 February 2007

See also the letter from Aliyyah Balson.

MCB = BNP, says Nick Cohen

“The BBC and Channel 4 News regularly present the leaders of the Muslim Council of Britain, Muslim Association of Britain and Muslim Public Affairs Committee as the unelected spokesmen for the Muslim community without any mention of their politics, but would never dream of presenting Nick Griffin, the leader of the BNP, as a spokesman for the white community.”

Nick Cohen in the Evening Standard.

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Cameron fails to understand threat of fascist BNP to British society

UAF_logoAnti-fascist campaigners have criticised David Cameron’s attack on the Muslim community organisations, which he compared to the BNP. Weyman Bennett, Joint Secretary of UAF said:

“The BNP represent the real threat to community cohesion, with their racist, Islamophobic, anti-Semitic and homophobic politics. The BNP whips up racist hatred and division for electoral gain, leading to attacks on all minority communities in areas they target.

“It is deeply offensive to liken the BNP to minority community organisations, particularly to Muslim groups who are the prime target of the BNP’s racism. Muslim communities experience racism and discrimination at all levels of society. They are being vilified and targeted daily.

“Mainstream parties have a responsibility not to provide succour to fascists: today, the BNP welcomes David Cameron’s comments on its website as a ‘propaganda victory’ for them and takes the opportunity to spread further Islamophobic bile against Muslim communities. Attacking multiculturalism is pandering to the BNP.”

Unite Against Fascism news report, 30 January 2007

Cameron attacks ‘Muslim hardliners’

David Cameron 2David Cameron yesterday endorsed a new Conservative report which condemned the “hardline” views of the Muslim Council of Britain and other Islamic groups. The Conservative leader argued that the Government must not bow to the “loudest voices” in the Muslim community when he attended the launch of the report by his national and international security policy group.

The report, Uniting the Country, singled out the Muslim Council of Britain (MCB), widely seen as the mainstream voice of Muslims in the UK, for allowing “hardline members… to dominate policy and crowd out more moderate voices.”

The Tory policy group, chaired by Dame Pauline Neville-Jones, the former head of the Joint Intelligence Committee, also challenged the MCB’s approval of extremist clerics like Yusuf al-Qaradawi, who supports the death penalty for gays, as well as its failure to participate in Holocaust Memorial Day.

Mr Cameron said: “Policy makers should stop assuming that the loudest voices and the most organised elements within the Muslim community necessarily represent the Muslim population as a whole. There’s a danger that groups with agendas aimed at separation rather than integration are deferred to when they should be challenged.”

Daily Telegraph, 31 January 2007


In an accompanying editorial, the Telegraph applauds Cameron and the Tories for “laying bare the perils of multiculturalism”.

For a response by the MCB, see the Guardian, 31 January 2007

See also MCB news release, 30 January 2007

As for the fascists of the British National Party, they criticise Cameron’s attack on multiculturalism and Muslim organisations on the grounds that it falls short of “dismantling the structures of the multicultural State and restoring our lost ancestral rights and freedoms”. BNP news article, 30 January 2007

Tories set sights on ‘separatist’ British Muslims

The Conservatives will today accuse Islamic groups including the high-profile, mainstream Muslim Council of Britain of promoting separation and ignoring the wishes of the people they represent.

A report by the party’s policy group on national and international security will tear into the MCB as part of a generalised attack on the concept of multiculturalism, which it says has divided people rather than simply respecting their differences. The report will underline comments made by the party’s leader, David Cameron, who warned yesterday that separatist Muslims who promote sharia law and demand special treatment for their faith are the “mirror image” of the British National party.

In an attack on the MCB – which was until recently feted by government ministers – the report says: “Its hardline members tend to dominate policy and crowd out more moderate and varied voices. As a result the MCB’s claim to ‘foster good community relations and work for the good of society as a whole’ is hard to reconcile with some of the positions it has taken.”

Last night Dame Pauline Neville-Jones, the former diplomat who chairs the policy commission, said multiculturalism “has tended on the whole to emphasise differences between us rather than actually creating a framework in which difference flourishes”.

While stressing that the group was not singling out Muslims, she did criticise the MCB’s approach. “We would like it to say that they actually stand specifically and explicitly for integration,” she told BBC2’s Newsnight. But it “does not in our view take a sufficiently strong stand against that kind of view”. She attacked the MCB’s supportive references to the conservative Muslim cleric Yusuf al-Qaradawi.

But on the same programme, Inayat Bunglawala, assistant secretary of the MCB, said Mr Qaradawi had spoken out against extremism. “In the report, in all its mentions of the Muslim Council of Britain, there’s no mention of any of the positive work we’ve done,” he said. “The MCB is proud to stand for integration. We want British Muslims to play their full role in all aspects of British society, we want obstacles to be removed.”

Guardian, 30 January 2007

For the MCB’s defence of multiculturalism see (pdf) here.