Muslim children in Switzerland have been told they must
shake hands with their teachers at the beginning and end of lessons or face
paying thousands of pounds in fines. A Swiss regional authority ruled a
controversial exemption to the tradition, granted to two teenage brothers by
their school, was unlawful.
The Muslim pupils, who attend a school in Therwil, northern
Switzerland, had told their female teachers earlier this year they were not
allowed to shake their hands because physical contact with women outside their
family was forbidden by their religion.
A local teacher's union claimed the decision discriminated
against women, while Switzerland's Justice Minister, Simonetta Sommaruga, said
that shaking hands was part of Swiss culture and life.
The town's mayor, Reto Wolf, added: "In our culture and
in our way of communication a handshake is normal and sends out respect for the
other person, and this has to be brought [home] to the children in
school."
A regional authority has now ruled teachers "had the
right" to demand handshakes. It said in a statement on Wednesday (25 May)
that "the public interest concerning gender equality as well as
integration of foreigners far outweighs that concerning the freedom of belief
of students".
Parents in Basel-Country now face a fine of up to 5,000
Swiss francs (£3,400, $5,000) if their children refuse a handshake from their
teacher, according to AFP.
The boys told Swiss media they would ignore the
"ridiculous" ruling, however, saying "nobody could make
them" comply. They said their refusal to shake their female teachers'
hands, which had seen them receive threats on social media, was to
"protect the dignity of women".
The row had caused a split among the 350,000 Muslims living
in Switzerland, which has a population of about 8m. The Federation of Islamic
Organisations in Switzerland (FIOS) declared that shaking hands with a member
of the opposite sex was "theologically permissible". It said the
practice was a common form of greeting between men and women in several Muslim
countries so should not be prohibited in Switzerland.
However, the Islamic Central Council of Switzerland argued
the greeting was forbidden in Islam. It said: "Classical (Islamic)
jurisprudence and the vast majority of contemporary legal scholars ... assume a
clear prohibition of this contact form (handshakes) between the sexes."
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