Maninthemirror
Banned
http://www.cbc.ca/m/news/canada/mon...-t-hear-case-of-woman-wearing-hijab-1.2974282
Right to wear a hijab where the face is not covered or not is the question in any location and does anyone have the ethical right to refuse accordance because of wearing it?
A Quebec judge told a woman appearing in her Montreal courtroom she would not hear her case until she removed her hijab.
In an audio recording of the proceedings obtained by CBC News, Judge Eliana Marengo is heard telling Rania El-Alloul on Tuesday that the courtroom is a secular place and that she is not suitably dressed.
"Hats and sunglasses for example, are not allowed. And I don't see why scarves on the head would be either," Marengo says in the recording.
"The same rules need to be applied to everyone. I will therefore not hear you if you are wearing a scarf on your head, just as I would not allow a person to appear before me wearing a hat or sunglasses on his or her head, or any other garment not suitable for a court proceeding."
When El-Alloul first appeared before Marengo, the judge asked her why she had a scarf on her head. El-Alloul replied that it was because she is a Muslim. The judge then said she would take a 30-minute recess.
When Marengo returned, she told El-Alloul she had a choice: remove her headscarf immediately or apply for a postponement in order to consult a lawyer. El-Alloul replied that she couldn't afford a lawyer and that she didn't want to postpone the case. Marengo then adjourned the case indefinitely.
'I felt that I'm not Canadian anymore'
In an interview, El-Alloul said she couldn't believe what was happening.
"When I came the first day when I made landing in Canada, I was wearing my hijab," she recalled.
"When I swore by God to be a good Canadian citizen I was wearing my hijab, and the judge, I shook hands with him the same day I became Canadian. I was really very happy. But what happened in court made me feel afraid. I felt that I'm not Canadian anymore."
El-Alloul said she's speaking out because she doesn't want what happened to her to happen to any other Muslim woman.
"When she insisted I should remove my hijab, really I felt like she was talking with me as ... not a human being. I don't want this thing to happen to any other lady. This is not the work of a judge. She doesn't deserve to be a judge."
Right to wear a hijab where the face is not covered or not is the question in any location and does anyone have the ethical right to refuse accordance because of wearing it?