BENGALURU — An lecturer of a private college in Karnataka’s Tumakuru district has resigned after being asked to remove her hijab by the college management.
Chandini Naz, an English lecturer at Jain PU College called the college management’s decision an “assault on her self-respect”.
In a letter Naz said, “I am resigning from my position of English lecturer as you demanded me to remove my hijab which I have been wearing for three years in your college. The right to religion is a constitutional right that nobody can deny. Thank you. I condemn your undemocratic act (sic).”
“She (Naz) is a part-time lecturer and used to come to class wearing the hijab. After the Karnataka High Court’s interim order, we asked her to remove the hijab in the staff room and go to class but she didn’t want to do that and hence resigned,” The Print quoted Jain PU College Principal K.T. Manjunath as having said.
“We are a private college. Whatever the management says, we have to follow. We were concerned that if a teacher is allowed to wear hijab and teach then Muslim students may follow suit,” Manjunath said, adding that as of now, no students in the college are allowed to wear hijabs.
While dozens of students across Karnataka are being denied entry into colleges and have been boycotting exams for refusing to remove hijabs, this is the first instance of a teacher resigning from her job over the row.
On Wednesday, scenes of Muslim girl students being asked to leave college premises by authorities and police officials for refusing to remove their hijabs were witnessed in several parts of Mandya, Hassan, Belagavi, and Ballari districts of the state.
Schools and colleges in Karnataka have been has seen weeks of tension over hijab restrictions and protests against them.
The protests started late last year when six students alleged that they were stopped from attending class wearing the headscarf. As the protests spread to several colleges, there were counter demonstrations involving saffron scarves.
Karnataka’s state government temporarily closed schools last week amid tension. As they reopen gradually, many schools and colleges have been seen telling students and teachers to remove the hijab before entering.