Christian School asked to Admit Beard-sporting Muslim Student


IANS

New Delhi, Sep 12: The Supreme Court Friday suspended a Madhya Pradesh-based Christian school's order expelling a Muslim student for sporting a beard.

A bench of Justice B.N. Agrawal and Justice G.S. Singhvi asked the unaided minority institution of one community to allow the schooling of the student from another minority community with it till a decision by the court on the boy's lawsuit.

The bench ordered restoration of Mohammed Salim's admission in the Nirmala Convent at Vidisha in Madhya Pradesh observing that the school's act of expelling the student was prima facie "ridiculous".

"So you have been dismissed merely because you have a beard," the bench asked Salim's counsel B.A. Khan and added, "So no Sikh student can sport a beard?

"Tomorrow they may say no to admission if you are not fair complexioned," said the bench, adding "it's ridiculous."

The bench also issued notice to school authorities and the state government on Salim's lawsuit, which sought scrapping of his school's anti-beards rule contending that it impinges upon his religious faith.

Salim's lawsuit has a chequered history at the apex court. Earlier it had been dismissed March 30 this year with another apex court bench making a remark that Muslim students cannot insist on sporting beards as it would lead to 'Talibanisation' of the country.

Facing criticism from Muslim groups, Justice Markandeya Katju later apologised for the remark and had recalled his order dismissing Salim's lawsuit.

While tendering the apology July 5, he had referred the lawsuit to Chief Justice K.G. Balakrishnan's bench, saying that the matter should be heard by another bench.

Accordingly, the matter was heard Friday by a bench of Justice Agrawal.

  

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Comment on this article

  • Ronnie Prabhu SJ, Mangalore

    Sat, Sep 12 2009

    I am fully with the judgment that no one should be discriminated against in educational institutions on grounds pertaining to his/her practice of religion. The problrm is to distinguish what is essential to one''s religion and what is just integral to it. If wearing a beard is essential to males in a religion then all males of that religion should be sporting one. I think each religion must define its essentials so far as relates to externals -which everyone who claims to be follower of that religion must be given all the freedom to observe. But this should be restricted only to essentials. How would we react to a group of students who say that coming to school with a trishul in hand is part of their religion and must be allowed to do so ?

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