http://arabnews.com/middleeast/article514072.ece
Christians fear Islamist pressure in Egypt
By MAGGIE MICHAEL | AP 

Published: Oct 8, 2011 22:00 Updated: Oct 8, 2011 22:00 

CAIRO: On her first day to school, 15-year-old Christian student Ferial Habib 
was stopped at the doorstep of her new high school with clear instructions: 
either put on a headscarf or no school this year.

Habib refused. While most Muslim women in Egypt wear the headscarf, Christians 
do not, and the move by administrators to force a Christian student to don it 
was unprecedented. For the next two weeks, Habib reported to school in the 
southern Egyptian village of Sheik Fadl every day in her uniform, without the 
head covering, only to be turned back by teachers.

One day, Habib heard the school loudspeakers echoing her name and teachers with 
megaphones leading a number of students in chants of “We don’t want Ferial 
here,” the teenager told The Associated Press.

Habib’s was allowed last week to attend without the scarf, and civil rights 
advocates say her case is a rare one. But it stokes the fears of Egypt’s 
significant Christian minority that they will become the victims as Islamists 
grow more assertive after the Feb. 11 toppling of President Hosni Mubarak. It 
also illustrates how amid the country’s political turmoil, with little sense of 
who is in charge and government control weakened, Islamic conservatives in 
low-level posts can step in and try to unilaterally enforce their own decisions.

Wagdi Halfa, one of Habib’s lawyers, said the root problem is a lack of the 
rule of law.

“We don’t want more laws but we want to activate the laws already in place,” he 
said. “We are in a dark tunnel in terms of sectarian tension. Even if you have 
the majority who are moderate Muslims, a minority of extremists can make big 
impact on them and poison their minds.”

In the past weeks, riots have broken out at two churches in southern Egypt, 
prompted by Muslim crowds angered by church construction. One riot broke out, 
near the city of Aswan, even after church officials agreed to a demand by local 
ultraconservative Muslims, called Salafis, that a cross and bells be removed 
from the building.

The violence is particularly frustrating for Christians because soon after 
Mubarak’s fall the new government promised to review and lift heavy Mubarak-era 
restrictions on building or renovating churches. The promise raised hopes among 
Christians that the government would establish a clear legal right to build, 
resolving an issue that in recent years has increasingly sparked riots. But the 
review never came, and Salafi clerics have increased their rhetoric against 
Christians, including accusing them of seeking to spread their faith with new 
churches.

Habib’s experience was startling because in general, Egypt’s Christians, who 
make up at least 10 percent of the population of 80 million, have enjoyed 
relative freedom in terms of dress and worship. The vast majority of Muslim 
women in Egypt put on the headscarf or hijab, either for religious or social 
reasons, but there’s little expectation that Christians wear it.

The demand that all students wear the hijab was a decision by administrators 
and teachers at the high school in Sheik Fadl, 110 miles (180 kilometers) south 
of Cairo in Minya province. They said the headscarf was part of the school 
uniform, necessary to protect girls from sexual harassment.

A top provincial Education Ministry official, Abdel-Gawad Abdullah, said in an 
interview with CTV, a private Egyptian Christian television network, that the 
ministry gives schools the right to decide on school uniforms, and that parents 
during screening and application can either accept or refuse.

“And if the father wants to move his daughter to another school, it is OK,” he 
said. “All the girls, including the Christians, put on the head cover and they 
have no problem,” he added.

Habib’s father Sorial complained to officials, demanding his daughter be 
allowed to attend without a scarf.

“After the revolution, there are no administration and no officials to go to. 
The system is lax and there is no supervision from the ministry,” he told AP. 
“If things were under control, extremists would not have a free hand to act as 
they wish.”

Habib was finally allowed to attend last Tuesday.

“I am happy I did what I want and that no one can force something on me. But I 
am afraid of the students and the teachers,” she told AP. “The teachers are not 
normal with me and I am sure they will give me low grades at the end of the 
year.”

Hossam Bahgat, head of the Cairo-based Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights, 
which tracks religious discrimination and other civil rights issues, said he 
had not seen a case like Habib’s before. “We know that there is pressure on 
Muslim girls to put on the hijab, especially in secondary school, not from the 
administration but from the girls.”

He said some Muslim girls in general put on the veil to distinguish themselves 
from Christians.

Recent attacks on churches in southern Egypt also illustrate the heat 
Christians are under. Under Mubarak-era rules, the building of a church or 
repairs for an existing one required permission from local authorities and the 
state security agency — a rule not applied to mosques. The rules sought to 
avoid outbursts of violence from Muslim hard-liners. Since permission was 
rarely given, Christians at times resorted to building churches in secret, 
often in parish guesthouses.

On Sept. 30, a Muslim mob attacked a church in southern village of Marynab in 
Aswan province because they believed the Christians were illegally constructing 
a new church. Church officials had documents showing they had permission to 
build a new church to replace a previous, run-down one at the same site.

Even before the attack, Muslim protests prompted priests to turn to security 
officials, who arranged a meeting with local elders and Salafis. In the face of 
their demands, the priests agreed to take down a cross and bells on the church, 
according to church officials. Still, after the Christians erected a dome, the 
mob attacked, setting the church and nearby homes and shops on fire.

Aswan’s governor, Gen. Mustafa Kamel Al-Sayyed, further hiked tensions by 
telling the media that the church was being built on the site of a guesthouse, 
suggesting it was illegal.

In response, hundreds of Christians marched in front of the governor’s office 
last week, demanding those behind the attack be prosecuted and families who 
lost homes be compensated. Christians also protested in Cairo, cutting off a 
main avenue in the heart of the capital, demanding the governor’s ouster, until 
soldiers dispersed them by force.

Days after the Aswan attack, Muslim villagers in the southern province of Sohag 
tried to storm Saint Girgis church, shouting “No to church construction,” as 
Christians on rooftops rained stones down on them. The assault was prompted by 
construction of a church in a guesthouse.


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