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Chicago Tribune – April 25, 2006

Scarf pulled off by cops, Muslims say

Deborah Horan

Dozens of area Muslims have placed protest calls to Arlington Heights Mayor Arlene Mulder demanding that charges against a Muslim civil rights protester be dropped after allegations were made that police ripped off the woman's headscarf during her October arrest.

Between 80 and 100 calls have been received at Mulder's office since last week after the Council on American-Islamic Relations, a Washington-based Muslim advocacy group, sent out mass e-mails asking people to protest the incident, said Maria Croy, an assistant to Village Manager William Dixon. . .

The protester, Rehana Khan of Chicago, was arrested Oct. 15 with four other people while demonstrating in Arlington Heights in support of immigrant rights and against the Minutemen, a group that opposes illegal immigration. Khan is to appear in court Tuesday.

Khan is charged with battery and resisting arrest. She is accused of hitting a female officer and trying to break free while being arrested, authorities said.

Khan alleges that police handcuffed her and then ripped off her headscarf, or hajib, which observant Muslim women believe Allah commanded them to wear, according to Christina Abraham of the Council on American-Islamic Relations.

Police allowed her to put on the headscarf during the ride to jail but then forced her to remove it again while she was being charged with resisting arrest, Abraham said.

"It's analogous to having a blouse ripped off," said council spokesman Ahmed Rehab. "It's a state of forced nudity.". . .

"Would the police pull off a woman's wig?" said Assad Busool, a professor at the American Islamic College in Chicago. "Do they strip people naked? No. Therefore there is no need to remove her head cover." ……

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/local/north/chi-0604250270apr25,1,4419562.story

Lawrence Journal World – April 20, 2006

Muslim students battle prejudice
'I've never done anything to anybody'

By Sophia Maines
 
It was just two days ago that Kansas University student Bazigha Tufail was taunted for being Muslim.

Tufail, 20, stopped at a food court on campus for a bite when she casually made eye contact with a young man. Tufail wore a headscarf as she does wherever she goes.

As the man walked by, he muttered in her direction, “Bombs away.”

The words stung. They gave her pause and left a lingering sadness.

“I’ve never done anything to anybody,” she said. “I’m like, ‘why?’ ... There’s no way to counter that ignorance.”

KU’s Muslim Student Assn. is hosting Islam Awareness Week through Friday to better students’ understanding of Muslims and Islam. The aim is to correct stereotypes and encourage tolerance.

“We want to present ourselves as who we are, to educate people,” said Fadlullah Firman, a KU student who helped organize the events.

A lecture on women in Islam is planned for tonight. On Friday, students can participate in “A Day in the Life of a Muslim,” spending a day with a Muslim student and observing the religion firsthand.

Those who spend the day with a Muslim student may not see too many differences from the lives of those outside the religion, some said.

Tufail, an architectural engineering student, reads novels in English, loves the book “Pride and Prejudice” and spends a lot of time studying. She’s planning for a trip to Japan this summer through the Kansas/Asia Scholars program.

“There’s nothing I do that’s different, really, except for prayers,” Tufail said, of the five times per day she prays.

Tufail grew up in Kansas City, the youngest child to parents from Pakistan. Her parents weren’t very religious, Tufail said, until they had children and learned it was up to them to pass their religion on to their children.

Tufail attended the Islamic School of Greater Kansas City for middle school and began wearing hijabs, or head scarves, at 14. There is no doubt that her religion affects her life and how some perceive her.

Tufail recalled attending Lee’s Summit High School in the days and weeks following the 9-11 attacks. Tufail’s family feared how students would react to her at school, as Muslims were targeted in many places.

A friend walked Tufail to and from classes. But some still got to her with their hateful words, she said. They called her names and used racial slurs.

Tufail kept her routine as normal as possible. She didn’t skip school. She faced the ridicule.

“I have to live my life,” she said.

She wrote an article for the student newspaper. She told the students how it felt to be in her shoes and she explained how the terrorists’ actions weren’t condoned by Islam….

http://www2.ljworld.com/news/2006/apr/20/muslim_students_battle_prejudice/