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Thalassery, 7 July
2010: A Muslim fundamentalist group The Popular
Front, in Thalassery of northern Kerala, has been
protesting against a Catholic school's ban on
headscarves. They say they will intensify their
protests. The same group is accused of chopping off a
Catholic professor's hand.
Muslims in Kerala say they will intensify their protest
against a Catholic school that refuses to allow girls
wearing headscarves to attend classes.

It is “our fundamental right to practice our religion,”
said Abdul Jabbar, district secretary of the Popular
Front of India, a confederation of Muslim organizations.
Muslim groups in Thalassery have been protesting the
Church-managed San Jos Metropolitan School’s policy for
over a year.
The school allows students to wear headscarves to campus
but wants them to take them off once they reach the
classroom.
“We will intensify our protest until the school permits
our students to wear headscarves in class,” said Jabbar,
who organized a march to the school on July 1.
He said Muslims also want Muslim boys to be allowed to
attend Friday prayers at a mosque nearby.
Principal Sister Rosemary said the school cannot agree
to the headscarf demand as it would make the school
uniform’s dress code meaningless.
“We will not accept the demand. It is not the sole
decision of the management; it is also the decision of
the Parent-Teacher Association,” she told ucanews.com.
The nun said the school also cannot allow students to
attend Friday prayers. Students are only allowed to
leave the campus after school hours because of security
and disciplinary reasons, she said.
Chancellor Father John Onamkulam said the
archdiocese-managed school treats all religions equally.
“We can’t show partiality to anyone.”
Although several talks between the school and Muslim
groups have failed, the Church is open to further talks,
the priest said.
Some 40 percent of 1,050 students in the co-educational
school are Muslims. Hindus form some 50 percent and
Christians make up the rest.
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