International referee Stephane Menard said on Sunday that the decision was made for safety reasons, and that it came out of a referees' meeting in Longueuil earlier in the day.
Menard told the Canadian Press that the hijab isn't included under the equipment allowed under World Tae Kwon Do Federation rules.
"We applied the rules to the letter," he said.
Well, which is it? Was the team banned because of safety considerations, or because the organizers scoured the rule-book until they found a reason not to include them?
Yo Quebec: "reasonable accommodation" does not mean immigrants should have to accommodate themselves to being hassled because they're Muslim.
PS. The girl in the photo at the top of the post is, I think, wearing a sports hijab under her helmet. In any case, here is a picture sans helmet. Not sure it does much for me aesthetically, but...
The sports hijab is the one on the right, the thing on the left is what people in the sports world call a "helmet"
ReplyDeleteNice to see you change your tune, though, once the facts emerged.
Isn't the one on the left wearing a gray hijab under the helmet?
ReplyDeleteAnyway, theres another picture I can post.
There have been too many stories like this coming out of Québec to think this isn't really anything other than a defense against what the pur laine think is a challenge to the "look and feel" of it (my) culture. It's the same kind of push for homogenisation and cultural preservation that prevented people from openly disliking Céline Dion earlier on, when she could have been stopped.
ReplyDeleteThis issue is easily solved.
ReplyDeleteHave the parents of the players sign a waiver stating that the organizers of any sporting event are not responsible for any injury that could result from wearing the hijab.
Put the responsibility on the player and her parents.
Then we can see if the organizers are really concerned about safety or whether they have other motives.
ottlib
ReplyDeleteI think motives are pretty clear allready, why expend additional effort to confirm what is obvious to most non-Quebecois.
I'm getting sick of this crap.
ReplyDeleteottlib
ReplyDeleteMiners cannot have their rights signed a way except by provincial governments in extremely rare cases.
the most basic thing that has been lost in the debate surrounding "reasonable accomodation" is that "reasonable" people don't have to waste their time talking about "accomodating" immigrants.
ReplyDeleteInstead of bowing to this chauvanistic and repressive ideology of making WOMEN cover themselves to that men aren't, um, 'tempted', let's take a different perspective. Let's say that all Muslim MEN should be mandated to wear a new religious symbol, called a blindfold, when out in public so that they will not be tempted. After all, they are being tempted by not only Muslim women.
ReplyDeleteThey would be required to wear the blindfold as a sign of their devotion to their faith at all times in public, unless they are accompanied by a female relative or female family member. They would of course then need to be driven everywhere by women, and of course they could not work anywhere except the home where they could remove the blindfold.
Why stop at muslim men? Why don't we put blindfolds on all men, so that rump of them (social conservatives) don't freak out and go balistic when they see cleavage, bare mid-rifts, upper thighs and...dudes kissing?
ReplyDeleteYup. Blind-folds. And duct-tape.
No just Muslim men. They're the one's who are so concerned about being tempted by women, not the rest of society.
ReplyDeleteI enjoy a bare midriff, a long leg, and a little bit too much cleavage. But I'm a conservative, so I like my women sexyyyyyy.
Anon 2:52,
ReplyDeleteI thought you guys reproduced by asexual division.
How about we let people wear whatever the hell they want?
ReplyDeleteExcellent! I'm going to start wearing a hogleg!
ReplyDelete