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Friuli school principal bans Islamic veil

'To avoid racism as well as provocation'

Redazione Ansa

(ANSA) - Udine, February 16 - The principal of a high school in the north-eastern Italian town of Cervignano del Friuli has banned the Islamic veil for students "to avoid racism and provocation", local newspaper Messaggero Veneto reported on Monday.
    Aldo Durì, principal of the "Malignani" institute near Udine, issued on February 11 a document forbidding female Muslim students from wearing the veil in school, although the news only emerged on Monday.
    In the document, Durì wrote that "since jihadists from ISIS have unleashed, with the brutality of their attacks, a 'total war' against the West, Shiites, all kinds of 'infidels', including moderate Sunnis, pursuing the crazy idea to restore an Islamic caliphate, anti-Muslim and anti-Arab sentiments have spread among our students".
    The principal noted that the school includes a numerous Arab community.
    Recalling a recent attack by an Italian student against an Egyptian classmate, Durì stressed that "religious wars don't exist and must not exist in schools".
    Durì noted that Italian schools are secular and "indifferent to the religion of students and their families" and that the "ostentation and exhibition, especially if imposed, of exterior signs of a religious confession can be taken as provocation and spark reactions of ostracism, disparagement or rejection".
    Durì also told ANSA that schools should not be a place to demonstrate ideologies, as well as political and religious ideas.
    "The Islamic veil is only an example", he said.
    While stressing that he wants to persuade students to stop wearing the veil in class through dialogue "without dramatization", the principal also called for legislation "banning all religious symbols from schools", including those of Italy's Catholic majority, as most classrooms in public schools have a crucifix on the wall.
   

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