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Muslim girls wearing Hijab barred from classes at Indian college

Hijab was never allowed in classroom, protest started after Dec 27: Udupi college principal​

Udupi government college principal Rudre Gowda spoke to India Today about the hijab row in Karnataka and said hijab was never allowed inside classrooms.​




Nagarjun Dwarakanath BangaluruFebruary 11, 2022UPDATED: February 11, 2022 12:34 IST
students wearing hijab in karnataka


As the hijab row peaks, India Today TV spoke to Udipi college principal Rudre Gowda who said students were allowed to wear the headscarf to the campus but not inside classrooms.


As the hijab row peaks, India Today spoke to Udipi college principal Rudre Gowda, who said students were allowed to wear the headscarf on the campus but not inside classrooms. He said, when students came to him seeking permission to wear the hijab in the classroom, he assured them that their request would be conveyed to the higher authorities.


On January 1, Muslim girl students of the state-run PU College in Karnataka's Udupi alleged that they were denied entry into the classroom for wearing hijab. It was alleged that principal Rudra Gowda did not permit them to wear hijab in the classrooms. Gowda earlier said the rule was being followed to ensure uniformity in classrooms.

HERE'S WHAT HE SAID:

1. On December 31, students met you to seek permission to wear hijab. What happened then?
A. We told them we would inform higher officials about their request. Till then, they should come the way they used to before -- without hijab.
2. Did students come to you with parents or Campus Front of India (CFI) or other organisation members?

A. On December 27, they said parents. I convinced the 12 students. On the second day as well, they said they came with their parents, but I doubted that. Then they said cousins. On the third day, they came with a CFI lawyer and the CFI students union. Only four students were not convinced. The rest have gone back to their classes.


3. Did the CFI interact with you again?

A. The CFI was already aggressive towards me in class on day 3. We told them there is a discipline in college. We don't have to talk to CFI. We will talk to their families (of the protesting students). We requested them [CFI] to let the girls study and not force them.

4. So you're saying these students have not been wearing hijab for the last two years?
A.Not two, but for the last 35 years there was no hijab in college. We allow them to wear it but not inside the classroom. During class hours, all students are allowed in uniform with no hijab. Only after December 27, they said they wanted to wear the hijab in the classroom.

6. Have families spoken to you?
A. All of them have spoken and been convinced but said they have gone too far ahead and can't come back now. They asked us to do something. We told the parents they should convince the children. If they don't listen to their parents, who will they listen to? Is there any meaning to this? We told the parents that if they are not listening to them, they are listening to outsiders.

7. Do you feel students are under the influence of CFI or others?
A. It seems so looking at the recent developments and after looking at their statements. They don't seem like our students anymore.

 
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Naturally, all that it comes to at the end, on being exposed fully, is to slap on a few emojis and utter a hollow laugh. If you want people to think that this business of a few girls wearing a hijab to school or to college is a stand-alone issue, you must think that you can get away with anything, because your readers are too ill-informed to see through your platitudes.

Come back after you grow up.

Never knew that you are such a great fighter, for the causes, in which you believe. Reminds me of late C R Das, from Bengal. Kudos and respect.
 
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Viral photos, bruised egos, radical student groups: Inside story of Karnataka’s hijab crisis​


The hijab row that has snowballed in Karnataka is rooted in the communally fraught coastal belt, where radical organisations vie for supremacy.​

ANUSHA RAVI SOOD
11 February, 2022 09:04 am IST


featured.jpg
Artwork: Soham Sen/ThePrint
Text Size: A- A+

Udupi: Abdul Shukur took a sip of water and bit into a chikki (peanut bar) at 6:30pm Tuesday. It was his first meal after a day-long fast and he had come to offer prayers at the Jamia Masjid in Udupi, Karnataka. Shukur’s daughter, Muskaan Zainab, studies at the city’s Government Pre-University (PU) College and is one of several students who have petitioned the Karnataka High Court for the right to wear the hijab (headscarf) on campus.
“Our entire family fasted today since our petition was being heard in court. I will fast tomorrow too,” 46-year old Shukur, who runs a small business in Malpe, said.

The hijab row has been making headlines since January, but Shukur claimed the issue was triggered in October when viral photos showed Muslim girls at a protest organised by the Akhil Bharatiya Vidyarthi Parishad (ABVP, the RSS-affiliated students’ body).

The images in question were posted on the Facebook page of the Udupi ABVP on 30 October last year. They showed Muslim girls holding the ABVP flag as part of a protest demanding a probe into the alleged rape of a Manipal student. In the communally sensitive coastal belt of Karnataka, the pictures ignited a controversy.
“I was taken aback to see my daughter there… because she isn’t a member of ABVP,” Shukur said. Furthermore, Muskaan was not wearing her usual headscarf in the photo.

“I asked her why she wasn’t wearing a headscarf in the photo, and that is when she told me that the college doesn’t allow hijabs in classrooms,” he said. This came as a shock to Shukur, who decided to confront the college principal.

Screengrab-of-a-post-on-ABVP-Udupis-Facebook-page-where-Muslim-girls-were-seen-participating-in-a-protest.jpg
Muslim girls at an October 2021 ABVP protest in Udupi | Photo: Screengrab from ABVP Udupi Facebook page


He was not the only one taking notice. According to an intel report submitted by the Udupi police to the state government, the Campus Front of India (CFI), which is the students’ wing of the Islamist outfit Popular Front of India (PFI), had approached parents with the offer to help take on the college management.

A source from the CFI who did not wish to be named told ThePrint that the ABVP protest incident had outraged the organisation. It therefore started encouraging Muslim women to refuse to join ABVP events and to fight for their right to wear hijabs in the classroom. The women’s parents also took these demands to the college.
“When I asked the principal why students were being sent to protest without consent and were not allowed to wear headscarves, he said it was a small issue,” Shukur said.


Rudre Gowda, principal of the college, rejected this allegation. “For years, students have been wearing hijabs to campus, but have been removing them during classes. These girls too were adhering to this, but since December, they started demanding that hijab should be allowed during classes too,” Gowda told ThePrint.
The matter quickly led to a standoff between the families of six Muslim students and the college management. The CFI also alleged that the college had, as retaliation, made details of the girls and their families public.
While there were attempts to negotiate an understanding between the students and the college authorities in Udupi, the row escalated rapidly — partly due to political organisations jumping on to the bandwagon and partly due to the wildfire effect of social media.

In January, the students petitioned the Karnataka High Court, by which time the issue was making headlines and had snowballed into communally charged conflicts in several Karnataka colleges.

Also Read: A timeline of how hijab row took centre stage in Karnataka politics and reached HC

Bruised egos and social media hype

karnataka-tieline.jpg
Graphic: Soham Sen/ThePrint

Before the hijab issue reached the headlines, there were weeks of efforts to forge an understanding between the families and the college.
A senior leader of the Udupi District Muslim Okkoota — an umbrella organisation of mosques, jamaats, and Islamic organisations in Udupi — told ThePrint on the condition of anonymity that the body had tried its best to convince the families that it was acceptable to remove the hijab in class.
“We advised the girls to not make a big issue out of not wearing hijab inside classrooms. We even took them and their parents to religious clerics and explained that it was okay to remove hijabs in the classroom,” he said.
However, the students were “adamant”, he said, because they had received backing from the CFI, the campus affiliate of the PFI, an Islamist outfit that was set up in Kerala in 2006 and which the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) wants banned because of its allegedly radical tendencies.

“The CFI saw [the hijab conflict] as an opportunity to strengthen its support base,” the Muslim Okkoota leader said. In coastal Karnataka, he explained, the two main students’ bodies are the ABVP and CFI, while the Congress’s campus body, the National Students Union of India (NSUI), does not have a presence in local colleges.
When ThePrint spoke to CFI members in Udupi, they claimed that the organisation got involved only after students of the PU College approached them on 27 December, after their memorandums to the district commissioner and education department officials did not yield results. The students in question also told ThePrint that they were not members of the CFI. However, at least three parents are members of the PFI’s political wing, the Social Democratic Party of India (SDPI).
By the end of December, though, nobody was in the mood for a compromise, according to the Muslim Okkoota leader. He said that the Muslim women’s protest, and the social media traction it got, riled the College Development Committee (CDC), which is empowered by the government to take administrative decisions for public educational institutions.

“In December and January, the students’ protests started getting attention on social media and the press. They were shown standing outside the classroom and making notes since they were not allowed inside. This hurt the egos of the committee members,” he claimed, adding that the senior-most members of this body were members of the BJP and RSS. None of the 21 members in the CDC are from the Muslim community.
The matter had now become a “prestige issue” with the BJP and other Hindutva organisations on one side, and the PFI and its affiliates on the other, the Muslim Okkoota leader said.

BJP vs. PFI

What both Hindutva and Muslim organisations can agree on is that as videos from Udupi went viral, they sparked protests in other districts too. Throughout January and February, Karnataka saw several face-offs in colleges between some students in hijabs and others wielding saffron scarves. Each side holds the other responsible.
BJP leaders maintain that without “instigation” from the PFI, the protests wouldn’t have reached such a magnitude.

“Within two days of the girls’ protest in January outside their classrooms, thousands of social media posts were released. How is that possible without a pre-planned, strategised effort?” V. Sunil Kumar, Minister for Energy and Kannada & Culture, told ThePrint.
“When [Muslim students] started escalating the matter, naturally, students from the Hindu community retaliated — a matter of action and reaction,” Kumar, who is also the MLA from Karkala in Udupi district, added.
karkala.jpg
V. Sunil Kumar, minister in the Karnataka cabinet and MLA from Karkala | Photo: Twitter/Sunil Kumar Karkala

Other BJP ministers in the Basavaraj Bommai cabinet have also made similar allegations against the PFI. “Students are being instigated to protest for hijab. The role of the PFI and its student wing CFI will be probed thoroughly,” B.C. Nagesh, Karnataka Minister of Primary & Secondary Education, told reporters Tuesday.
The PFI has denied such allegations and has attempted to distance itself from the row.

“As an organisation, we are working for upliftment of marginalised communities. We are in no way involved in this row. Our student wing (CFI) is only trying to provide moral support to aggrieved students. Communal flareups only benefit the BJP,” Anis Ahmed, national general secretary of the PFI, told ThePrint.
The CFI has acknowledged that it was helping the Muslim women’s agitation in Udupi’s PU College, but denied having any political motives.
“We are a student organisation. We do not have any links with political parties. We are leading the students who are fighting for their rights. Muslim students have been harassed at that institute for years now. This is not a retort that erupted overnight,” Masood Manna, a committee member of CFI Udupi, told ThePrint.

Also Read: The right answer to the wrong hijab question is still a wrong answer

Why the PFI and its affiliates are so controversial

The PFI is the organisational successor of the Kerala-based National Development Front (NDF) and claims to fight for social justice for Muslims, particularly in the southern states of Kerala, Karnataka, and Tamil Nadu.
In 2010, the political wing of the PFI — the Social Democratic Party of India (SDPI) — was registered with the Election Commission. Since then, it has slowly been making inroads in the coastal Karnataka belt. It had one of its biggest triumphs in the December 2021 elections to 58 Urban Local Bodies (ULBs) in Karnataka, when it won six seats.

The CFI, meanwhile, is popular among Muslim students in three districts of coastal Karnataka — Udupi, Dakshin Kannada and Uttar Kannada. The CFI has actively eaten into the popularity of the Congress’s student wing, the NSUI, in the three districts.

However, the PFI has faced allegations of radicalism from the BJP. In April last year, the Union government told the Supreme Court that it was in the process of banning the PFI, claiming that many office-bearers had links with the now banned Student Islamic Movement of India (SIMI). Chargesheets have also been filed against members of PFI over their alleged involvement in various instances of unrest, which the organisation has dismisses as “baseless”.

Notably, some Muslim community leaders also have reservations about the PFI and its branches. The senior Muslim Okkoota leader who was quoted earlier alleged that the hijab protests seemed to be a ploy by the organisation’s political wing to mobilise support.

“All the Muslim girls use the same vocabulary… ‘fundamental rights’, ‘constitutional issue’, ‘hijab is intrinsic to Islam’. While they may have been wearing hijab for years, the words and phrases that are being publicly said are coming from one source,” the Muslim Okkuta leader claimed.

Allegations of “instigation”, however, have also been levelled against Hindutva organisations, which have started a counter-agitation involving saffron shawls and scarves, and an influx into colleges of ‘protesters’ who are not even students.
Officials-from-Kunadapur-Government-PU-college-stick-a-copy-of-government-order-imposing-dress-code-on-compund-wall-on-Monday.jpg
Officials from Kundapur Government PU College put up copies of the government order imposing a dress code on Monday | Photo: Anusha Ravi Sood/ThePrint

Doubling down on the hijab

“Perhaps one or two Muslim girls used to wear hijab to college but now the number has drastically increased. They are doing this to assert their religious identity,” Halady Srinivas Poojari, MLA for Kundapur, told ThePrint. He isn’t far off the mark, although there are varying interpretations of why exactly the women are doing so.
According to Abdul Aziz Udyavar, organising secretary of the Udupi District Muslim Okkoota, the fight over the right to wear the hijab has inspired other girls from the community to exercise their constitutionally guaranteed freedoms. “Just because I was not exercising my right before doesn’t mean I shouldn’t do it in the future,” Udyavar said.

Principals of at least three colleges in Kundapur told ThePrint that while some Muslim students had always worn the hijab to classes, the number had increased ever since the row took off in January.
“There is no explicit rule that bans hijab in the college, but there is no rule that permits it either,” Naveen Shetty, principal of R.N. Shetty College, said.
According to him, students who sought permission to wear hijabs earlier could usually do so “as long as it doesn’t cause trouble”. Now, Shetty said, it was causing trouble and so hijabs as well as saffron scarves were banned in the college. “The management decided to ban both explicitly until the time the high court order comes,” Shetty added.
Students-of-Udupi-Government-womens-PU-College-who-have-petitioned-the-High-Court.-1.jpg
The Udupi Government PU College students who petitioned the Karnataka High Court | Photo: Anusha Ravi Sood/ThePrint

The Udupi PU College students who petitioned the court told ThePrint that they shouldn’t have to choose between their education and wearing a hijab, but said their stance has come at a cost to them.

Abdul Shukur, Muskaan’s father, said he was concerned for the family’s safety.
Another student, A.H. Almas, told ThePrint about the hostility that she was encountering.
“When we started protesting, our details were leaked and unknown people follow us around,” she alleged, adding that members of the CFI were giving the women protection.

The Muslim Okkoota had until recently refrained from openly backing the hijab cause but has now reconsidered its decision. “When Muslim girls who are studying at co-ed colleges that have allowed hijab for years started getting targeted, we had to step in since it is injustice being meted out to them,” Ibrahim Sahib Kota, president of the Udupi Muslim Okkoota, said.

‘Senior VHP, Bajrang Dal, Hindu Jagaran Vedike leaders oversee saffron scarf distribution’

When ThePrint visited Mahatma Gandhi Memorial (MGM) College in Udupi, students wearing hijabs were engaged in a face-off with others who had donned saffron scarves and headgear. But, when ThePrint spoke to many of the Hindu protestors, they admitted they were no longer students of the college.
“I studied commerce here and passed out in the 2016-2017 academic year,” Sushanth sheepishly told ThePrint, identifying himself as an ABVP member. “For many years, [Muslim women students] have been wearing hijabs in classrooms but now since they are making a strong assertion of their religious right, should we not as Hindus assert our religious identity too?” he asked, insisting that the protesting Hindu students had all brought their own saffron scarves and shawls.
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Students in saffron headgear at MGM College, Udupi | Photo: Anusha Ravi Sood/ThePrint

ThePrint, however, witnessed male protestors distributing saffron shawls to women students who had just arrived at the college. The scene was in line with a couple of videos that went viral this month: One showed students returning their saffron headgear to purported members of the Hindu Jagaran Vedike near their college, and another showed someone in an Innova car distributing saffron scarves to students at a college in Kodagu.


Another protestor, Akshat Pai, said he had graduated from the college in 2014, but was there in his capacity as a Hindu Jagaran Vedike leader. “We haven’t pressured the students into protesting. They are doing it on their own,” Akshat Pai said, as students in saffron accessories hovered around him and asked whether they should leave or stay.

A first-year B.Com. student, a Hindu woman, told ThePrint on the condition of anonymity that many of the protestors did not study at the college. “Why are outsiders coming and supplying saffron scarves to our collegemates?” she asked, adding that she had no problem with the hijab just as her Muslim friends had no objection to the bindi on her forehead.
Harshita, another Hindu student at MGM college, had a different viewpoint. She cited a 5 February government order proscribing clothes that “disturb public law and order” and said that if Muslim women could wear hijabs, Hindus could wear saffron scarves.

Prakash Kukkehalli, Mangaluru unit general secretary of the Hindu Jagaran Vedike, was observing the protest at MGM college from the other side of the road, with young men from the campus occasionally arriving to consult with him.
“We are not instigating students. We are only giving them moral support,” Kukkehalli told ThePrint.

According to him, the PFI, SDPI, and other Muslim organisations were provoking students for political benefit. “They have launched social media warfare to dent the image of India,” he said. “Today they will ask for hijab, tomorrow it will be Sharia law… a separate nation.”
Prakash-Kukkehalli-Mangaluru-division-General-Secretary-Hindu-Jagarana-Vedike..jpg
Prakash Kukkehalli, Mangaluru unit general secretary, Hindu Jagarana Vedike | Photo: Anusha Ravi Sood/ThePrint

A former ABVP office-bearer, who did not want to be named, told ThePrint how the saffron scarf protest is orchestrated by Hindutva organisations.
“The saffron scarves are procured and distributed by office bearers. Senior leaders of the VHP, Bajrang Dal, Hindu Jagarana Vedike even visit protest sites to observe whom to groom as a leader and if anyone is straying away from discussed slogans or statements,” he said.
This former ABVP leader added that he did not believe in this kind of “communal activism”, whether from Hindus or Muslims, since it only harmed students’ prospects.
“Student activists should be fighting for better colleges, professional courses and employment — not this hijab or saffron scarf fight,” he said.

A deputy superintendent-rank police officer from Udupi told ThePrint that the police were aware of saffron scarves being handed out to students, but that this was not a crime. “Just before students arrive at their colleges, saffron scarves are being handed to them but that is not an offence,” the police officer said.
Over the past few days, though, the protests have taken a more violent turn. The police arrested 15 people in Shivamogga and Bagalkot districts Tuesday. Last week, police in Kundapur, Udupi, arrested two people, Abdul Majeed and Rajab, who were carrying knives near Kundapur Government PU College.

Communally sensitive belt of Karnataka

The three districts of coastal Karnataka — Dakshin Kannada, Uttar Kannada, and Udupi —are often counted among the more communally sensitive regions in India. All three districts have a sizeable population of Muslims as well as Christians.
“There are at least a hundred communal violence incidents in Udupi and Dakshin Kannada alone annually,” Suresh Bhat Bakrabail, an activist of the Karnataka Communal Harmony Forum (which keeps a track of communal violence incidents in coastal Karnataka) told ThePrint. In 2021, in a four-year high, there were more than 120 such incidents in these two districts alone.
Social activists attribute the frequent communal flare-ups in the region, which is frequently described as a “Hindutva laboratory“, largely to incitement from radical Hindu and Muslim organisations.
(Edited by Asavari Singh)


 
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Hijab was never allowed in classroom, protest started after Dec 27: Udupi college principal​

Udupi government college principal Rudre Gowda spoke to India Today about the hijab row in Karnataka and said hijab was never allowed inside classrooms.​




Nagarjun Dwarakanath BangaluruFebruary 11, 2022UPDATED: February 11, 2022 12:34 IST
students wearing hijab in karnataka


As the hijab row peaks, India Today TV spoke to Udipi college principal Rudre Gowda who said students were allowed to wear the headscarf to the campus but not inside classrooms.


As the hijab row peaks, India Today spoke to Udipi college principal Rudre Gowda, who said students were allowed to wear the headscarf on the campus but not inside classrooms. He said, when students came to him seeking permission to wear the hijab in the classroom, he assured them that their request would be conveyed to the higher authorities.


On January 1, Muslim girl students of the state-run PU College in Karnataka's Udupi alleged that they were denied entry into the classroom for wearing hijab. It was alleged that principal Rudra Gowda did not permit them to wear hijab in the classrooms. Gowda earlier said the rule was being followed to ensure uniformity in classrooms.

HERE'S WHAT HE SAID:

1. On December 31, students met you to seek permission to wear hijab. What happened then?
A. We told them we would inform higher officials about their request. Till then, they should come the way they used to before -- without hijab.
2. Did students come to you with parents or Campus Front of India (CFI) or other organisation members?

A. On December 27, they said parents. I convinced the 12 students. On the second day as well, they said they came with their parents, but I doubted that. Then they said cousins. On the third day, they came with a CFI lawyer and the CFI students union. Only four students were not convinced. The rest have gone back to their classes.


3. Did the CFI interact with you again?

A. The CFI was already aggressive towards me in class on day 3. We told them there is a discipline in college. We don't have to talk to CFI. We will talk to their families (of the protesting students). We requested them [CFI] to let the girls study and not force them.

4. So you're saying these students have not been wearing hijab for the last two years?
A.Not two, but for the last 35 years there was no hijab in college. We allow them to wear it but not inside the classroom. During class hours, all students are allowed in uniform with no hijab. Only after December 27, they said they wanted to wear the hijab in the classroom.

6. Have families spoken to you?
A. All of them have spoken and been convinced but said they have gone too far ahead and can't come back now. They asked us to do something. We told the parents they should convince the children. If they don't listen to their parents, who will they listen to? Is there any meaning to this? We told the parents that if they are not listening to them, they are listening to outsiders.

7. Do you feel students are under the influence of CFI or others?
A. It seems so looking at the recent developments and after looking at their statements. They don't seem like our students anymore.


Straight from the horses mouth itself. I don't know how can somebody educated can support such indiscipline and religious bigotry/politics in educational institutions.
 
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This is not hijab
It is burka

When banning hijab they mean banning this:

View attachment 814514View attachment 814515

I know. But the girls seem to have graduated from Hijab to Burqa. That was the point of my post.

Bhai no need to go to school/college then, just send somebody else ;) nobody will come to know anyways. Attendance pura karne ka issue hi khatam :lol: :lol:


It is the Hindus who have a problem with Muslims wearing a Hijab or Burqa.

So Why don't you Hindus sit at home.
 
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Never knew that you are such a great fighter, for the causes, in which you believe. Reminds me of late C R Das, from Bengal. Kudos and respect.
We are helpless idiots, we liberals, and can only write on the Internet. That is why people like @xeuss and my friend Luqmaan despise us. We can do nothing but wring our hands and complain about the unfairness of it all.
 
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Viral photos, bruised egos, radical student groups: Inside story of Karnataka’s hijab crisis​


The hijab row that has snowballed in Karnataka is rooted in the communally fraught coastal belt, where radical organisations vie for supremacy.​

ANUSHA RAVI SOOD
11 February, 2022 09:04 am IST


featured.jpg
Artwork: Soham Sen/ThePrint
Text Size: A- A+

Udupi: Abdul Shukur took a sip of water and bit into a chikki (peanut bar) at 6:30pm Tuesday. It was his first meal after a day-long fast and he had come to offer prayers at the Jamia Masjid in Udupi, Karnataka. Shukur’s daughter, Muskaan Zainab, studies at the city’s Government Pre-University (PU) College and is one of several students who have petitioned the Karnataka High Court for the right to wear the hijab (headscarf) on campus.
“Our entire family fasted today since our petition was being heard in court. I will fast tomorrow too,” 46-year old Shukur, who runs a small business in Malpe, said.

The hijab row has been making headlines since January, but Shukur claimed the issue was triggered in October when viral photos showed Muslim girls at a protest organised by the Akhil Bharatiya Vidyarthi Parishad (ABVP, the RSS-affiliated students’ body).

The images in question were posted on the Facebook page of the Udupi ABVP on 30 October last year. They showed Muslim girls holding the ABVP flag as part of a protest demanding a probe into the alleged rape of a Manipal student. In the communally sensitive coastal belt of Karnataka, the pictures ignited a controversy.
“I was taken aback to see my daughter there… because she isn’t a member of ABVP,” Shukur said. Furthermore, Muskaan was not wearing her usual headscarf in the photo.

“I asked her why she wasn’t wearing a headscarf in the photo, and that is when she told me that the college doesn’t allow hijabs in classrooms,” he said. This came as a shock to Shukur, who decided to confront the college principal.

Screengrab-of-a-post-on-ABVP-Udupis-Facebook-page-where-Muslim-girls-were-seen-participating-in-a-protest.jpg
Muslim girls at an October 2021 ABVP protest in Udupi | Photo: Screengrab from ABVP Udupi Facebook page


He was not the only one taking notice. According to an intel report submitted by the Udupi police to the state government, the Campus Front of India (CFI), which is the students’ wing of the Islamist outfit Popular Front of India (PFI), had approached parents with the offer to help take on the college management.

A source from the CFI who did not wish to be named told ThePrint that the ABVP protest incident had outraged the organisation. It therefore started encouraging Muslim women to refuse to join ABVP events and to fight for their right to wear hijabs in the classroom. The women’s parents also took these demands to the college.
“When I asked the principal why students were being sent to protest without consent and were not allowed to wear headscarves, he said it was a small issue,” Shukur said.


Rudre Gowda, principal of the college, rejected this allegation. “For years, students have been wearing hijabs to campus, but have been removing them during classes. These girls too were adhering to this, but since December, they started demanding that hijab should be allowed during classes too,” Gowda told ThePrint.
The matter quickly led to a standoff between the families of six Muslim students and the college management. The CFI also alleged that the college had, as retaliation, made details of the girls and their families public.
While there were attempts to negotiate an understanding between the students and the college authorities in Udupi, the row escalated rapidly — partly due to political organisations jumping on to the bandwagon and partly due to the wildfire effect of social media.

In January, the students petitioned the Karnataka High Court, by which time the issue was making headlines and had snowballed into communally charged conflicts in several Karnataka colleges.

Also Read: A timeline of how hijab row took centre stage in Karnataka politics and reached HC

Bruised egos and social media hype

karnataka-tieline.jpg
Graphic: Soham Sen/ThePrint

Before the hijab issue reached the headlines, there were weeks of efforts to forge an understanding between the families and the college.
A senior leader of the Udupi District Muslim Okkoota — an umbrella organisation of mosques, jamaats, and Islamic organisations in Udupi — told ThePrint on the condition of anonymity that the body had tried its best to convince the families that it was acceptable to remove the hijab in class.
“We advised the girls to not make a big issue out of not wearing hijab inside classrooms. We even took them and their parents to religious clerics and explained that it was okay to remove hijabs in the classroom,” he said.
However, the students were “adamant”, he said, because they had received backing from the CFI, the campus affiliate of the PFI, an Islamist outfit that was set up in Kerala in 2006 and which the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) wants banned because of its allegedly radical tendencies.

“The CFI saw [the hijab conflict] as an opportunity to strengthen its support base,” the Muslim Okkoota leader said. In coastal Karnataka, he explained, the two main students’ bodies are the ABVP and CFI, while the Congress’s campus body, the National Students Union of India (NSUI), does not have a presence in local colleges.
When ThePrint spoke to CFI members in Udupi, they claimed that the organisation got involved only after students of the PU College approached them on 27 December, after their memorandums to the district commissioner and education department officials did not yield results. The students in question also told ThePrint that they were not members of the CFI. However, at least three parents are members of the PFI’s political wing, the Social Democratic Party of India (SDPI).
By the end of December, though, nobody was in the mood for a compromise, according to the Muslim Okkoota leader. He said that the Muslim women’s protest, and the social media traction it got, riled the College Development Committee (CDC), which is empowered by the government to take administrative decisions for public educational institutions.

“In December and January, the students’ protests started getting attention on social media and the press. They were shown standing outside the classroom and making notes since they were not allowed inside. This hurt the egos of the committee members,” he claimed, adding that the senior-most members of this body were members of the BJP and RSS. None of the 21 members in the CDC are from the Muslim community.
The matter had now become a “prestige issue” with the BJP and other Hindutva organisations on one side, and the PFI and its affiliates on the other, the Muslim Okkoota leader said.

BJP vs. PFI

What both Hindutva and Muslim organisations can agree on is that as videos from Udupi went viral, they sparked protests in other districts too. Throughout January and February, Karnataka saw several face-offs in colleges between some students in hijabs and others wielding saffron scarves. Each side holds the other responsible.
BJP leaders maintain that without “instigation” from the PFI, the protests wouldn’t have reached such a magnitude.

“Within two days of the girls’ protest in January outside their classrooms, thousands of social media posts were released. How is that possible without a pre-planned, strategised effort?” V. Sunil Kumar, Minister for Energy and Kannada & Culture, told ThePrint.
“When [Muslim students] started escalating the matter, naturally, students from the Hindu community retaliated — a matter of action and reaction,” Kumar, who is also the MLA from Karkala in Udupi district, added.
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V. Sunil Kumar, minister in the Karnataka cabinet and MLA from Karkala | Photo: Twitter/Sunil Kumar Karkala

Other BJP ministers in the Basavaraj Bommai cabinet have also made similar allegations against the PFI. “Students are being instigated to protest for hijab. The role of the PFI and its student wing CFI will be probed thoroughly,” B.C. Nagesh, Karnataka Minister of Primary & Secondary Education, told reporters Tuesday.
The PFI has denied such allegations and has attempted to distance itself from the row.

“As an organisation, we are working for upliftment of marginalised communities. We are in no way involved in this row. Our student wing (CFI) is only trying to provide moral support to aggrieved students. Communal flareups only benefit the BJP,” Anis Ahmed, national general secretary of the PFI, told ThePrint.
The CFI has acknowledged that it was helping the Muslim women’s agitation in Udupi’s PU College, but denied having any political motives.
“We are a student organisation. We do not have any links with political parties. We are leading the students who are fighting for their rights. Muslim students have been harassed at that institute for years now. This is not a retort that erupted overnight,” Masood Manna, a committee member of CFI Udupi, told ThePrint.

Also Read: The right answer to the wrong hijab question is still a wrong answer

Why the PFI and its affiliates are so controversial

The PFI is the organisational successor of the Kerala-based National Development Front (NDF) and claims to fight for social justice for Muslims, particularly in the southern states of Kerala, Karnataka, and Tamil Nadu.
In 2010, the political wing of the PFI — the Social Democratic Party of India (SDPI) — was registered with the Election Commission. Since then, it has slowly been making inroads in the coastal Karnataka belt. It had one of its biggest triumphs in the December 2021 elections to 58 Urban Local Bodies (ULBs) in Karnataka, when it won six seats.

The CFI, meanwhile, is popular among Muslim students in three districts of coastal Karnataka — Udupi, Dakshin Kannada and Uttar Kannada. The CFI has actively eaten into the popularity of the Congress’s student wing, the NSUI, in the three districts.

However, the PFI has faced allegations of radicalism from the BJP. In April last year, the Union government told the Supreme Court that it was in the process of banning the PFI, claiming that many office-bearers had links with the now banned Student Islamic Movement of India (SIMI). Chargesheets have also been filed against members of PFI over their alleged involvement in various instances of unrest, which the organisation has dismisses as “baseless”.

Notably, some Muslim community leaders also have reservations about the PFI and its branches. The senior Muslim Okkoota leader who was quoted earlier alleged that the hijab protests seemed to be a ploy by the organisation’s political wing to mobilise support.

“All the Muslim girls use the same vocabulary… ‘fundamental rights’, ‘constitutional issue’, ‘hijab is intrinsic to Islam’. While they may have been wearing hijab for years, the words and phrases that are being publicly said are coming from one source,” the Muslim Okkuta leader claimed.

Allegations of “instigation”, however, have also been levelled against Hindutva organisations, which have started a counter-agitation involving saffron shawls and scarves, and an influx into colleges of ‘protesters’ who are not even students.
Officials-from-Kunadapur-Government-PU-college-stick-a-copy-of-government-order-imposing-dress-code-on-compund-wall-on-Monday.jpg
Officials from Kundapur Government PU College put up copies of the government order imposing a dress code on Monday | Photo: Anusha Ravi Sood/ThePrint

Doubling down on the hijab

“Perhaps one or two Muslim girls used to wear hijab to college but now the number has drastically increased. They are doing this to assert their religious identity,” Halady Srinivas Poojari, MLA for Kundapur, told ThePrint. He isn’t far off the mark, although there are varying interpretations of why exactly the women are doing so.
According to Abdul Aziz Udyavar, organising secretary of the Udupi District Muslim Okkoota, the fight over the right to wear the hijab has inspired other girls from the community to exercise their constitutionally guaranteed freedoms. “Just because I was not exercising my right before doesn’t mean I shouldn’t do it in the future,” Udyavar said.

Principals of at least three colleges in Kundapur told ThePrint that while some Muslim students had always worn the hijab to classes, the number had increased ever since the row took off in January.
“There is no explicit rule that bans hijab in the college, but there is no rule that permits it either,” Naveen Shetty, principal of R.N. Shetty College, said.
According to him, students who sought permission to wear hijabs earlier could usually do so “as long as it doesn’t cause trouble”. Now, Shetty said, it was causing trouble and so hijabs as well as saffron scarves were banned in the college. “The management decided to ban both explicitly until the time the high court order comes,” Shetty added.
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The Udupi Government PU College students who petitioned the Karnataka High Court | Photo: Anusha Ravi Sood/ThePrint

The Udupi PU College students who petitioned the court told ThePrint that they shouldn’t have to choose between their education and wearing a hijab, but said their stance has come at a cost to them.

Abdul Shukur, Muskaan’s father, said he was concerned for the family’s safety.
Another student, A.H. Almas, told ThePrint about the hostility that she was encountering.
“When we started protesting, our details were leaked and unknown people follow us around,” she alleged, adding that members of the CFI were giving the women protection.

The Muslim Okkoota had until recently refrained from openly backing the hijab cause but has now reconsidered its decision. “When Muslim girls who are studying at co-ed colleges that have allowed hijab for years started getting targeted, we had to step in since it is injustice being meted out to them,” Ibrahim Sahib Kota, president of the Udupi Muslim Okkoota, said.

‘Senior VHP, Bajrang Dal, Hindu Jagaran Vedike leaders oversee saffron scarf distribution’

When ThePrint visited Mahatma Gandhi Memorial (MGM) College in Udupi, students wearing hijabs were engaged in a face-off with others who had donned saffron scarves and headgear. But, when ThePrint spoke to many of the Hindu protestors, they admitted they were no longer students of the college.
“I studied commerce here and passed out in the 2016-2017 academic year,” Sushanth sheepishly told ThePrint, identifying himself as an ABVP member. “For many years, [Muslim women students] have been wearing hijabs in classrooms but now since they are making a strong assertion of their religious right, should we not as Hindus assert our religious identity too?” he asked, insisting that the protesting Hindu students had all brought their own saffron scarves and shawls.
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Students in saffron headgear at MGM College, Udupi | Photo: Anusha Ravi Sood/ThePrint

ThePrint, however, witnessed male protestors distributing saffron shawls to women students who had just arrived at the college. The scene was in line with a couple of videos that went viral this month: One showed students returning their saffron headgear to purported members of the Hindu Jagaran Vedike near their college, and another showed someone in an Innova car distributing saffron scarves to students at a college in Kodagu.


Another protestor, Akshat Pai, said he had graduated from the college in 2014, but was there in his capacity as a Hindu Jagaran Vedike leader. “We haven’t pressured the students into protesting. They are doing it on their own,” Akshat Pai said, as students in saffron accessories hovered around him and asked whether they should leave or stay.

A first-year B.Com. student, a Hindu woman, told ThePrint on the condition of anonymity that many of the protestors did not study at the college. “Why are outsiders coming and supplying saffron scarves to our collegemates?” she asked, adding that she had no problem with the hijab just as her Muslim friends had no objection to the bindi on her forehead.
Harshita, another Hindu student at MGM college, had a different viewpoint. She cited a 5 February government order proscribing clothes that “disturb public law and order” and said that if Muslim women could wear hijabs, Hindus could wear saffron scarves.

Prakash Kukkehalli, Mangaluru unit general secretary of the Hindu Jagaran Vedike, was observing the protest at MGM college from the other side of the road, with young men from the campus occasionally arriving to consult with him.
“We are not instigating students. We are only giving them moral support,” Kukkehalli told ThePrint.

According to him, the PFI, SDPI, and other Muslim organisations were provoking students for political benefit. “They have launched social media warfare to dent the image of India,” he said. “Today they will ask for hijab, tomorrow it will be Sharia law… a separate nation.”
Prakash-Kukkehalli-Mangaluru-division-General-Secretary-Hindu-Jagarana-Vedike..jpg
Prakash Kukkehalli, Mangaluru unit general secretary, Hindu Jagarana Vedike | Photo: Anusha Ravi Sood/ThePrint

A former ABVP office-bearer, who did not want to be named, told ThePrint how the saffron scarf protest is orchestrated by Hindutva organisations.
“The saffron scarves are procured and distributed by office bearers. Senior leaders of the VHP, Bajrang Dal, Hindu Jagarana Vedike even visit protest sites to observe whom to groom as a leader and if anyone is straying away from discussed slogans or statements,” he said.
This former ABVP leader added that he did not believe in this kind of “communal activism”, whether from Hindus or Muslims, since it only harmed students’ prospects.
“Student activists should be fighting for better colleges, professional courses and employment — not this hijab or saffron scarf fight,” he said.

A deputy superintendent-rank police officer from Udupi told ThePrint that the police were aware of saffron scarves being handed out to students, but that this was not a crime. “Just before students arrive at their colleges, saffron scarves are being handed to them but that is not an offence,” the police officer said.
Over the past few days, though, the protests have taken a more violent turn. The police arrested 15 people in Shivamogga and Bagalkot districts Tuesday. Last week, police in Kundapur, Udupi, arrested two people, Abdul Majeed and Rajab, who were carrying knives near Kundapur Government PU College.

Communally sensitive belt of Karnataka

The three districts of coastal Karnataka — Dakshin Kannada, Uttar Kannada, and Udupi —are often counted among the more communally sensitive regions in India. All three districts have a sizeable population of Muslims as well as Christians.
“There are at least a hundred communal violence incidents in Udupi and Dakshin Kannada alone annually,” Suresh Bhat Bakrabail, an activist of the Karnataka Communal Harmony Forum (which keeps a track of communal violence incidents in coastal Karnataka) told ThePrint. In 2021, in a four-year high, there were more than 120 such incidents in these two districts alone.
Social activists attribute the frequent communal flare-ups in the region, which is frequently described as a “Hindutva laboratory“, largely to incitement from radical Hindu and Muslim organisations.
(Edited by Asavari Singh)



If The Print was around in 1930s Germany, Goebbels would be proud.

What is being presented here is nothing more than an attempt to show that the Muslim girls are in the wrong and to make this a "both sides" debate with elaborate conspiracy theories.

See the effort to ignore the absolute terrorism unleashed by the depraved society on a handful girls by intimidating them.

As I said, the world has never seen a depraved society like this.
 
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The said girls were not wearing hijab till December 2021. So, did they suddenly they started feeling religious? Weren't they muslims before then?

What do you mean by - 'None of the colleges had any restrictions?' Did the uniform was introduced in Jan 2022? If it's not mentioned in the rule book that you can't come to school dressed like a peacock that doesn't mean you can go there dressed as a peacock.

In fact it is clearly stated that students have been informed that they will have to adhere to rules prescribed by the school/college and they have signed and given the undertaking. Maybe with exception of that one college which probably allowed hijab then but they always can amend their rules as well

It was the girls who changed the status-quo not the college. Other students reacted and authorities if made an exception for one set will have to make the same for others as well. Do you want rest of the class to sit with Hare Rama Hare Krishna Shawls with Tripund Tilaks and Rudraksha Kanthas b'coz it's their religion. Is it a freaking school/college or Mandir/Masjid?

Read a bit more and you will learn a thing or more about the makings of the said controversy

https://www.opindia.com/2022/02/an-activist-shares-a-timeline-of-the-hijab-propaganda/

Ignore the gibberish of aimim fellow and listen to the other one who is a muslim himself


lol....quoting OpIndia to support your point is like taking help from the Mothership of Terrorism.

OpIndia is nothing more than a Sanghi rag that spews lies and venom against Muslims. Your inclination to read such filth shows where you have been refueling your hate these days.

I just have to say, so much effort to enforce the fictitious "rules" on a handful of Muslim girls shows the obsession of this depraved society with Muslims. Somebody rightly said.....small d!ck syndrome.
 
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If The Print was around in 1930s Germany, Goebbels would be proud.


See the effort to ignore the absolute terrorism unleashed by the depraved society on a handful girls by intimidating them.
Absolute terrorism that got intimidated by handful of girls? That's an oxymoron.
You sound too bitter. What' exactly your problem. Got rejected by a Hindu girl and can't recover from it?
 
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Absolute terrorism that got intimidated by handful of girls? That's an oxymoron.
You sound too bitter. What' exactly your problem. Got rejected by a Hindu girl and can't recover from it?

It's not an oxymoron - Your depraved society is nothing more than a bully and attacks only when you guys outnumber Muslims 50 to 1.

We all saw the video where one girl shouts Allahu Akbar and the pack of hyenas run away like mongrels.

As far as Hindu girls are concerned....well, everyone knows how much Hindu girls looooove Muslim men. Let's just leave it at that.
 
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