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Muslim girls wearing Hijab barred from classes at Indian college

Sanghi Unkil - these are the rules that say Hijab is allowed

Then, according to the management rules, if the color of the scarf matches that with the uniform, it should be fine and the school authorities are to be blamed. In the video however, I'm not sure if black hijab exactly matches with that of the uniform.

I was expecting the 'Sanghi' word. Basically, anyone that goes against your belief is a Sanghi lol. RSS will be proud that they have so many people in their shakhas😂

Tomorrow, you'll call me Sanghi for just being a Hindu and not believing in your religion😆 . It's easy to see through this fake victimization now.
 
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Then, according to the management rules, if the color of the scarf matches that with the uniform, it should be fine and the school authorities are to be blamed. In the video however, I'm not sure if black hijab exactly matches with that of the uniform.

I was expecting the 'Sanghi' word. Basically, anyone that goes against your belief is a Sanghi lol. RSS will be proud that they have so many people in their shakhas😂

Tomorrow, you'll call me Sanghi for just being a Hindu and not believing in your religion😆 . It's easy to see through this fake victimization now.



A Sanghi is not necessarily a person who is a member of the Sangh Parivar. A Sanghi is a person who is not a Muslim, but is still obsessed with anything & everything related to Muslims and Islam. Sanghis could care less about what they do or their community does, but have an OCD when it comes to Muslims - on how they dress, what they eat, what rules they follow and what rules they break.

If you are not one of those people described above, then I regret my words and apologize.
 
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Seems like the Hindu students in this college have found the right compromise for the situation. Let the Hindu kids wear their saffron shawl and in turn, the Muslim girls can wear their burqa. Win Win :cheers:
Surreal that kids today are getting drawn into this nonsense
 
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A Sanghi is not necessarily a person who is a member of the Sangh Parivar. A Sanghi is a person who is not a Muslim, but is still obsessed with anything & everything related to Muslims and Islam. Sanghis could care less about what they do or their community does, but have an OCD when it comes to Muslims - on how they dress, what they eat, what rules they follow and what rules they break.

If you are not one of those people described above, then I regret my words and apologize.
My point is, you alienate people by labelling them as a certain section whenever anything goes against your views/beliefs. And name calling is not how you argue with people.
 
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In the coming days, more colleges in Karnataka will stop girls from entering the college if they have hijab.

Since the matter is now in High Court (the Udupi case), the judges will note that there is no dress code or uniform in colleges and call on the government to enact rules or a law prescribing what is allowed or banned.

Govt will then happily ban hijab from schools and colleges in state.

That will then empower these SaffronNazis even more to attack Muslim women under the excuse of “stopping Muslim women from breaking the law”

See - this is how these Sanghis operate - they make a controversy out of nothing and then enact laws that invariably favor the majority under the pretense of ending the “controversy” or maintaining “law and order”

We’ve seen it with cow slaughter, love jihad and now this

As predicted....


Amid Hijab vs Saffron Scarves, Karnataka Bans "Clothes That Disturb Law"​

Karnataka has seen an escalating row over religious attires since last month with right-wing groups in Udupi and Chikkamagaluru objecting to Muslim girls attending classes wearing hijabs.​

KarnatakaReported by Nehal Kidwai, Edited by Divyanshu Dutta Roy (with inputs from PTI)Updated: February 05, 2022 10:29 pm IST
Amid Hijab vs Saffron Scarves, Karnataka Bans 'Clothes That Disturb Law'

A group of students marched to college wearing saffron scarves and shouting slogans.


Bengaluru:
A spiralling controversy over hijabs or headscarves worn by Muslim women in schools and colleges in Karnataka, including a march of Hindu students wearing saffron scarves and shouting slogans, prompted the state government on Saturday to ban clothes "which disturb equality, integrity and public order".
"Invoking 133 (2) of the Karnataka Education Act-1983, which says a uniform style of clothes has to be worn compulsorily. The private school administration can choose a uniform of their choice," the government order said, adding that students have to follow a dress code chosen by authorities.
"In the event of the administrative committee not selecting a uniform, clothes which disturb equality, integrity and public law and order should not be worn," the order said.
"The education department has noticed that in some education institutions, the boys and girls have started behaving according to their religion, which hurts the equality and unity," it added.
Karnataka has seen an escalating row over religious attires since last month with right-wing groups in Udupi and Chikkamagaluru objecting to Muslim girls attending classes wearing hijabs.
The controversy quickly spread to other parts of the state with groups of Hindu students showing up to class in saffron scarves.
On Saturday, videos from Kundapur in the Udupi district showed boys and girls wearing the scarves over their college uniforms and raising slogans of "Jai Shri Ram (praise Lord Ram)".
With the issue now set to come up before the high court, Chief Minister Bommai on Friday held a meeting with Law and Education departments - which seems to have led to the new order.
On Tuesday, the Karnataka High Court will hear petitions filed by five girls studying in a government pre-university college in Udupi, questioning hijab restrictions.
The face-off has also taken a political turn as Congress leaders supported those wearing hijabs while the ruling BJP said it will not allow "Talibanisation" of education institutions.
Former Chief Minister Siddaramaiah of the Congress accused the BJP and RSS of trying to spark communal strife throughout the state and urged Chief Minister Basavaraj Bommai to immediately arrest those who instigate people.
"The constitution has given the right to practice any religion which means one can wear any clothes according to their religion. Prohibiting 'Hijab-wearing students from entering school is a violation of fundamental rights," he said.
The BJP's state president and Member of Parliament Nalin Kumar Kateel said the government will not allow hijab at educational institutions and will take strict measures to ensure that things go as per the rules of the school.

"There is a BJP government in this state, there is no room for hijab or any other related incidents. Schools are temples of mother Saraswathi (goddess of education); everyone should abide by rules and regulations there. Bringing religion there is not right, what students need is education, if someone can't follow rules they can choose their path elsewhere," he said.
4CommentsFormer Chief Minister HD Kumaraswamy hit out at both the BJP and Congress, asking the government to allow hijabs in places where it was allowed till now, and ban them at places where it was started recently.
 
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Sikhs keep unkempt hair and wear turban as part of their religion, tell me which school has banned the entry of Sikhs stating school regulations.
This shameless defense of discrimination is sickening.
You probably mean well, but Sikhs do not keep unkempt hair; they keep uncut hair, and take great pains to dress it and to keep it in very good order.
 
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You probably mean well, but Sikhs do not keep unkempt hair; they keep uncut hair, and take great pains to dress it and to keep it in very good order.
Hey Joe,
My point is simple, if one section of the society can be given relaxation, there won't be an issue for granting the relaxation to the other group. The rule must be same for everyone irrespective of their caste, creed or religion.
 
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Hey Joe,
My point is simple, if one section of the society can be given relaxation, there won't be an issue for granting the relaxation to the other group. The rule must be same for everyone irrespective of their caste, creed or religion.
LOL.

I wasn't replying to your argument. I was quibbling. Your point is correct, within common sense limits, that is. The rules must be the same.
 
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Hey Joe,
My point is simple, if one section of the society can be given relaxation, there won't be an issue for granting the relaxation to the other group. The rule must be same for everyone irrespective of their caste, creed or religion.

There is only one solution of the Hindutvadi scums: CHHITTAROL. Nothing else would work. :p:
 
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Hey Joe,
My point is simple, if one section of the society can be given relaxation, there won't be an issue for granting the relaxation to the other group. The rule must be same for everyone irrespective of their caste, creed or religion.
You have to understand - we are going through an existential crisis, existential in the exact sense of the word.

Nobody really knows how it will turn out. Most liberals hope it will turn out well, but it is a hope. I personally don't think that in my lifetime, we will see a return to normalcy.
 
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You have to understand - we are going through an existential crisis, existential in the exact sense of the word.

Nobody really knows how it will turn out. Most liberals hope it will turn out well, but it is a hope. I personally don't think that in my lifetime, we will see a return to normalcy.

Printing Ghazwa e Hind banners and saffron flags seems a very profitable business opportunity. Wanna do JV?

We can also address the needs of the other two minority groups.
 
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