Ghanaian Muslims have welcomed a recent presidential
directive emphasizing the citizen's right to freedom of faith as spelled out in
the national constitution.
"It's like our prayers have finally been heard,"
Kausar Mohammed, a nursing student, told The Anadolu Agency.
"It's good because it will help us practice our
faith," he said.
In his annual state-of-the-nation address on Thursday,
President John Mahama reiterated his commitment to Article 21 of the
constitution, which guarantees citizens the freedom of religion and the freedom
to express their religious beliefs.
"It is wrong under our constitution for Muslim students
to be compelled to attend church services, or for Christian students to be
compelled to attend Muslim congregational prayers," he explained.
"It is also wrong to prevent Muslim women from wearing
the hijab or [Catholic] nuns from wearing their habits to work or school,"
Mahama added.
"Heads of institution must note this for strict
compliance," he warned. "Appropriate sanctions will be taken against
any head of institution who acts contrary to constitutional provisions."
Prior to the president's directive, many female Muslim
high-school students – and female Muslims working in the public sector – had
been forced to take off their veils.
The issue was more pronounced at missionary schools and
nurse-training colleges.
Therefore, the president's speech came as a relief for
Kausar, who says seeing her colleagues humiliated for wearing the veil deterred
her from wearing one herself.
"Growing up wearing a veil everywhere you go and then
going to a tertiary institution and there's a law that you have to remove the
veil – you feel like you've been cheated," she told AA.
"Everybody is used to you wearing the veil; then,
people see you one morning going to work with your hair uncovered," she
added bitterly.
"You feel like you are naked because your uniform is
short and you're not dressed like a Muslim lady," she lamented.
The president's speech was also music to the ears of Sadia
Isaaka, a student nurse at the government-run Ridge Hospital in Accra.
"I have received a [phone] text that it is OK for us to
wear the veil," she told AA jubilantly.
"I will go for clinicals next semester. I will try
wearing my veil and see what happens," said Isaaka.
She has had bad experiences in the past wearing her hijab to
the hospital.
"Once I wore the veil to work and our supervisor said
she didn't ever want to see it again," she recalled.
The supervisor had told Isaaka, the student said, that her
hijab was "not part of nursing ethics."
"She said it in front of people. I felt really bad, but
I didn't have a choice," she recalled. "Being a Muslim, you can't
dress in your uniform with your veil. As soon as you enter the ward you have to
take the veil off."
According to a 2010 population census, 71.2 percent of
Ghana's population is Christian, while Muslims account for some 17.6 percent of
the populace.
-No church service-
Muhammed Andani Husseini, president of Ghana's Muslim
Students Association, likewise hopes the presidential directive will end the
challenges Muslim students face at high schools and universities.
"I am very happy. It means we have our future in our
hand and the law is in our favor," he told AA.
Husseini hopes the president's speech will change the public
perception regarding the challenges faced by Muslims.
"We hope all Ghanaians will understand that this issue
[anti-Muslim discrimination] is real and that we must confront it as a
people," he said.
"Muslim students in about 70 percent of senior high
schools are forced to attend church services," Husseini noted.
"Every morning, you are forced to attend church
service. If you fail, you are fined a maximum of 20 Ghanaian cedi [roughly
$6]," he fumed.
"If you're in school to acquire knowledge, do you have
to go to church to acquire this knowledge?" Husseini asked.
He lamented that many educational institutions in the
country did not provide places of worship for Muslim students.
"Some students have a place of worship, but they are
not permitted to erect a building. So they worship under the scotching sun, and
when it rains it becomes difficult for them to observe their daily
prayers," he said.
The student leader noted that female Muslim students were
not allowed to wear veils while at the schools' boarding houses.
"You live at home as a Muslim girl and you always wear
a hijab. Then you enter a senior high school and you're asked to wear a very
short dress and you can't wear a veil," he said.
Husseini is cautiously optimistic that the president's
speech will help end these malpractices.
"While jubilant over the statements made by the
president, we also worry about statements from the implementers of state policy
on education, the Ghana Education Service," he told AA.
"The important thing for us is that we have the law on
our side and that we can wear the hijab without any fear or favor," the
student leader asserted.
The Muslim caucus in Ghana's House of Parliament has long
advocated for Muslims' religious rights.
"If care is not taken, we will destabilize the peace…
because if you are going to force others to believe what you believe, this is a
breach of the constitution," lawmaker Mohammed Muntaka Mubarak told AA.
"We don't want a situation where there will be a
confrontation," he added.
Credit to worldbulletin.net
No comments:
Post a Comment