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Society News
Sikhs
March in Paris Against Religious Signs Law Banning Muslim Hijab, Sikh Turban
December 04, 2003
Article courtesy of AFP- website
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PARIS - Around 2,000 Sikhs from across Europe marched through central
Paris to demand exemption from a proposed French law that would ban religious
signs and clothing -- including the turban worn by Sikh males -- from schools.
Organised by leaders of France's small community of around 6,000 Sikhs, the
demonstration from the Place de la Republique was joined by contingents from
Britain, Germany, Italy and the Netherlands all concerned at the threat to what
they see as an essential part of Sikh identity.
"The turban is our religious symbol and we cannot take it off for any kind of
law. We understand about secularity -- but the government must see our
situation. In a democracy it should not be a question of deciding between
religion and going to school," said accountant Girsev Singh.
The "secularity" law which goes before the French National Assembly next week
will ban the wearing of "conspicuous" religious insignia in schools, and is
aimed primarily at the Islamic headscarf -- seen by many in France as a symbol
of radicalism among the country's five million Muslims.
But the turban became an unintended target because during the law's drafting,
the Sikhs were never even consulted. "What? -- there are Sikhs in France?" an
education ministry official was quoted as saying by the New York Times
newspaper.
"We have to take to the streets because we have to show the French that we live
here too," laughed Chain Singh, who heads a Sikh temple in the Paris suburb of
Bobigny. "They forgot we were here!"
Unaccustomed to the French art of the street protest, the Sikhs were offered the
classic route through eastern Paris that is used scores of times every year by
trade union and left-wing marchers. Waving tricolour flags or ribbons, they
proceeded gingerly, a loud-speaker periodically uttering "Vive la France."
Banners read, "Turban - sign of respect;" "Turban is a symbol of Sikh
sovereignty, liberty and nationhood. It is not a religious symbol;" and "Racism
under pretext of secularism in the land of Jean-Paul Sartre."
Some marchers carried blurred black-and-white pictures showing ancestors who
fought for the allied forces in World War I. Some 80,000 Sikhs are estimated to
have died in France during the war, and are buried in military cemeteries in the
north.
"The turban is an integral part of our dress -- just as a westerner would wear
his tie. We would feel undressed if we did not wear it," said Sardar Simranjit
Singh, a member of the Indian parliament who flew to Paris to express solidirty.
"We are a separate nationality but we have no state and no government. The
corollary is that it is by the effort of individual Sikhs from all over the
world that we can exert pressure," he said.
"The turban does not signify orthodoxy or fundamentalism. It is simply our way
of life," said Gurcharan Singh who is mayor of the London suburb of Ealing in
Britain.
"In Britain they have granted exemptions for Sikhs to wear motorcycles with a
turban and also at schools. I like it in Britain as a Sikh. I am part of the
British way of life. I am sure the French Sikhs are the same here. I do not see
why there should be this problem," he said.
Talks are underway between the Sikh community and the French government to find
a way out of the impasse, though a suggestion last week from Education Minister
Luc Ferry that schoolboys should wear a transparent hair-net was not seen as
serious by Sikhs on the march.
The community argues that the turban is not a religious symbol but a cultural
one, because the injunction contained in Sikh scriptures is for men not to cut
their hair and the turban is merely a way of containing it.
"If the law is passed we will be obliged to take off our turbans. But we won't,"
said 14 year-old Jasvir Singh who attends school in Bobigny. "We will either go
to private schools, or study abroad -- or leave France for good."
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