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To be fair, if it is school policy is it so very wrong?

My parents chose to send me to a school with a fairly lax school uniform policy. More disciplinarian mums and dads sent their kids to the ersatz grammar school on the other side of town where a skewed school tie would have resulted in detention.


Not sure I see the difference, especially as these are private schools. It seems they've only been criticised from a desire by muslim community leaders not to seem to be offending the nonmuslim locals, which says more about them than it does about the school's policy surely.


Edited one time(s) at 03:20

Nope.

We didnt have school ties, and thought the schools that did were anachronistic petit borgeouis institutions.


But the parents obviously didn't see it that way.


I may think similar thoughts about the veil, but these kids parents don't see it that way or they wouldn't be paying to send them there.


Unless you meant literally, in which case I suppose it depends on the width and length of the tie.

Dr Taj Hargey, an imam and chairman of the Muslim Educational Centre of Oxford, said: "This is very disturbing and sets a dangerous precedent.

"It means that Muslim children are being brainwashed into thinking they must segregate and separate themselves from mainstream society.

"The use of taxpayers' money for such institutions should be absolutely opposed. The wearing of the burka or niqab is a tribal custom and these garments are not even mentioned in the Koran."


Quite a bit different to wearing a school tie as part of your uniform.


And


Explaining the school's ethos, Madani's website says: "If we oppose the lifestyle of the west then it does not seem sensible that the teachers and the system, which represents that lifestyle, should educate our children."


Then what are you doing here? Fuck off back to middle ages middle eastern values if that's what you want for you and your children.

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