HomeLatest NewsReligious hatred: Bengaluru college allegedly asks Sikh girl to remove turban

Religious hatred: Bengaluru college allegedly asks Sikh girl to remove turban

Bengaluru: A college in Bengaluru allegedly asked a 17-year-old Sikh girl to remove her turban citing the Karnataka High Court’s order banning religious attire in educational institutions, The Times of India reported on Thursday.

The college was citing the directive of a three-judge bench of the High Court barring the students in Karnataka from wearing “religious clothes” in schools and colleges until further orders. The court has been hearing petitions of Muslim students, who are fighting for their right to wear hijabs in educational institutions.

Referring to the order, the Mount Carmel Pre-University College in Bengaluru allegedly asked the girl, an Amritdhari (baptised) Sikh, to remove her turban on two occasions. The first such occasion was on February 16. At the time, the girl reportedly refused to remove her turban.

The girl is the president of the students’ association in the college.

College authorities subsequently spoke to her father, saying that while they understood the significance of the turban for a Sikh, they had to follow the court’s order.

“On Tuesday, when [the] deputy director of pre-university education [north] visited the college, he found a group of girls in hijab and told them to come to the office and told them about the high court order,” The Times of India quoted a college spokesperson as saying. “These girls have been demanding now that no girls should be allowed to wear their religious symbols and therefore the Sikh girl also should not be allowed to wear the turban.” Scroll. In

Rate This Article:
No comments

leave a comment

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.