Alhamdulillah this is a brave young lady that
understands the importance of Islam...She not only did
the right thing by keeping her Hijab on and sitting
out, but she made the best of it...She understood it
was wrong and she sat out and cheered her team...There
will be many times in which our Islamic laws and
values will be challaneged...It is very important that
we stand up for our beliefs and it is ALSO very
important to handle it in the right way...Take it
easy...And take action by law or in other lawful
ways...Yes, I udnerstand that this is a hard battle to
win with through the law, but Inshallah our efforts
will become one and Inshallah we will bring the change
and values of our Religion of Islam and have other
respect and understand them...Only one way to make a
differnce nowadays...And that is to keep our standards
and go forth on bringing foreign nations to an
understanding of Islam in peaceful way...And it is
he/she that makes a change through peaceful methods
that will be rewarded the most inshallah...

Here is the Article

The basketball player opts to sit out a tournament
game rather than take off her hijab. At halftime,
officials relent.

By SHERRI DAY

Published April 5, 2005

TAMPA - Briana Canty doesn't regret standing up for
her religion. But last weekend her convictions
temporarily sidelined her hoop dreams. Briana, a
sixth-grade student at Greco Middle School in Temple
Terrace, is Muslim. As a sign of her faith, she wears
a hijab, a head covering worn by many Islamic women
after reaching puberty. Last Friday, at an Amateur
Athletic Union basketball tournament in Orlando,
Briana had to choose between her faith and her passion
for basketball.

Tournament officials told her to remove her hijab or
sit on the bench.

For Briana, 12, the decision to sit out was easy.
"It's my religion, and I'd rather follow my religion
than to break it to play basketball," Briana said
Monday, reflecting on the weekend's events. "I was
sort of disappointed, but I was still cheering on the
team."

She went to Orlando to play forward for the Tampa
Extremes, a local AAU girls' basketball team. Briana
played in the team's first game Friday afternoon
without incident. But she sat on the bench for much of
the day's second game after officials cited NCAA rules
prohibiting players from wearing head coverings and
jewelry during games.

Her mother, Carla Canty, was outraged. Canty said she
couldn't believe this was happening in America in
2005. After her initial attempts to negotiate with
tournament officials were unsuccessful, Canty called
the Florida Council on American- Islamic Relations in
Tampa.

The group intervened on Briana's behalf.

Tournament officials first agreed to let Briana play
if her mother would sign a document agreeing to take
responsibility for her and any players who could be
injured because of her hijab.

Canty refused.

At halftime, tournament officials finally allowed
Briana to rejoin her teammates. She also played
Saturday, but her team was eventually eliminated.

"It just breaks my heart that I had to go in there and
go back and forth with those people," Canty said.
"It's just kind of sad that they would actually try to
tell the child she can't play because she's wearing
her scarf."

This is not the first time religious issues and
athletics collided.

Last fall, a University of South Florida basketball
player was at the center of a national controversy
when she converted to Islam and insisted on wearing a
hijab, long-sleeved shirts and long pants in games.
The school agreed to petition the NCAA for an
exemption to its uniform rules. But the issue
disintegrated when the student quit the team, moved
back to her native Oregon and ultimately left Islam
for Christianity.

In the latest incident, Ahmed Bedier, a spokesman for
the Florida Council on American-Islamic Relations,
commended the AAU for accommodating Canty's religious
stance. But athletic groups need to do much more, he
said. "We are in the process of trying to petition the
NCAA to change their rules so it's more clear that
there would be some sort of exemptions based on
religious rights," Bedier said. Officials from the
NCAA and the AAU did not return calls for comment.

Briana Canty is glad to have the incident behind her.

At Greco Middle School, she runs track, and plays
basketball, soccer and volleyball. She always wears
her hijab and hopes that other Muslim girls will learn
from her example.

"I hope that other Muslim girls do the same thing that
I did so they can stand up for their religion because
our religion needs to be stronger," she said.

http://www.sptimes.com/2005/04/05/Hillsborough/Muslim_head_scarf_deb.shtml


                
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