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Islamica Magazine is a full-color international contemporary affairs magazine headquartered in Los Angeles, California with editorial offices located in Amman, Jordan, Cambridge, Massachusetts and London, England. Islamica aims to broaden perspectives on Islam and to provide a voice for Muslims to articulate their concerns while establishing cross-cultural relations between Muslims and their neighbors and co-religionists. Islamica Magazine is circulated to thousands of readers and subscribers in over 20 countries around the world.

About Arsalan Iftikhar

Arsalan Iftikhar serves as Contributing Editor for Islamica Magazine, an international contemporary affairs magazine headquartered in Los Angeles and with editorial offices in London, Amman and Cambridge, Massachusetts. His interviews and commentaries appear regularly in international media outlets such as CNN, BBC World Service, The TODAY Show, FOX News, Associated Press, MSNBC, C-SPAN, Al-Jazeera, NBC Nightly News, Washington Post, ABC World News Tonight, The New York Times, Rolling Stone and Newsweek magazine (among dozens others worldwide).

He is also a contracted freelance opinion writer with over 15 major daily newspapers including The Houston Chronicle, Detroit Free Press, San Diego Union-Tribune, Charlotte Observer, St. Louis-Post Dispatch, Kansas City Star, Miami Herald and many more. He was also a contributing author to Taking Back Islam (Rodale Press), winner of the 2003 Wilbur Communications Award for Religion Book of the Year.

He graduated from Washington University in St. Louis in 1999 and received his law degree from Washington University School of Law in 2003. A native Chicagoan, he specializes in international human rights law and is licensed to practice law in Washington DC.

American Muslim Athlete Disqualified Over Uniform

According to The Associated Press, a Washington D.C. high school track star was recently disqualified from a meet because officials said the custom-made outfit she wears to conform to her Muslim faith "violated competition rules".

In addition, Juashaunna Kelly, a senior at the District of Columbia's Theodore Roosevelt High School, has the fastest mile and 2-mile times of any girl runner in the city this winter. She was disqualified from the Montgomery Invitational indoor track meet in January.

The AP reported that: "Ms. Kelly was wearing the same uniform she has worn for three seasons while running for Theodore Roosevelt's cross-country and track teams. The custom-made, one-piece blue and orange unitard covers her head, arms, torso and legs. Over the unitard, she wears the same orange and blue T-shirt and shorts as her teammates."

"It's not special," Kelly told the Associated Press. "It doesn't make me perform better."

The Maryland chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union says meet officials should not have disqualified Kelly.

"The attire wasn't providing a competitive advantage to the girl," Debbie Joen of ACLU-Maryland said. "There really doesn't seem to be a legitimate interest that the state has that would override the student's right to religious freedom."

Constitutional legalities aside, I think it is pretty cool that a girl who is wearing two or three more layers of clothing and adhering to her faith is still the fastest girl on the track.

Go Juashaunna...

Published Monday, January 28, 2008 11:59 PM by Arsalan Iftikhar

© Arsalan Iftikhar. All rights reserved.

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franflipp said:

During the weeks following the January 12 Montgomery Invitational Indoor Track Championships in Largo, Maryland,  there were articles relating to the supposed disqualification of a Muslim athlete being posted on both the major and local news media sources as well as on numerous blog sites.  These articles, released through the AP by the Washington Post, were full of inconsistencies and inaccuracies and fueled a firestorm of religious discrimination debates, resulting in threats and volumes of hate mail directed at the meet director and officials.

In this January 30 newspaper article, the track officials have finally been  allowed to tell their side of the  story.  I hope you will post this so that they too will have a chance to be heard.  Thank you.  

Wednesday, Jan. 30, 2008                                                                        GAZETTE.NET

Officials: Religion not issue in runner’s exclusion

Incident involving the color of a Muslim girl’s uniform ‘has

been blown out of proportion,’ District administrator says

by Chay Rao and Stephanie Siegel | Staff Writers

Montgomery school officials recently came under fire for being insensitive and even racist after a Muslim girl was told she could not participate in a county track meet because of her uniform, which covered her head, arms and legs in accordance with Muslim customs.

But according to Montgomery County Public Schools officials, religion had nothing to do with the ruling made by an event referee and MCPS employees had no authority to overrule the decision.

‘‘This has been a colossal misunderstanding,” said Kate Harrison, MCPS spokeswoman.

Juashuanna Kelly, a senior at Theodore Roosevelt High School in Washington, was told she could not run in the Jan. 12 Montgomery Invitational indoor track and field meet because the garment she wore did not conform to color standards. Kelly, who is Muslim, was wearing a half-blue and half-orange unitard and head covering under her track uniform.

National Federation of State High School Associations (NFHS) Indoor Track and Field guidelines state that a runner must wear a single-colored tracksuit under a school jersey — a rule to help identify runners at the finish line in case of close finishes.

‘‘The uniform rules are clearly stated within the rule book. ... If she had worn a solid color, she would have been fine. It was something that could have been avoided early on,” said Becky Oakes, assistant director of NFHS. ‘‘No one wants the athlete DQ’d.”

Kelly, who had worn the special uniform to other meets, including the Montgomery Invitational last year, had been granted a waiver for meets in Washington, according to Allen Chin, director of athletics for District of Columbia Public Schools.

‘‘I feel sorry for the young girl, but frankly, this is something that has been blown out of proportion,” Chin said.

After being told she could participate if she wore a single-colored, long-sleeved T-shirt over the unitard, Kelly and her coach, Tony Bowden, decided to withdraw from the race, Harrison said. Kelly was not disqualified, according to Harrison.

‘‘Religion had no factor in the decision over whether she could participate,” she said.

Bo Meyers, a hired official who is qualified as a ‘‘master referee” by USA Track and Field, the national governing body for track and field sports, made the ruling, Harrison said.

Oakes said Kelly had time to make a change if she wanted. ‘‘Everything was handled properly by meet officials according to the rules,” she said.

However, for many in the Muslim community, barring Kelly from the meet because of the colors of her unitard was the wrong decision.

‘‘The people who made this decision were very insensitive,” said Rashid Makhdoom, a spokesman for the Montgomery County Muslim Council, a nonprofit dedicated to promoting Muslim interests and involvement in the county. ‘‘I think there should be some sensitivity training. There is some feeling that there might be some kind of race [discrimination] involved.”

Harrison said training to make employees aware of cultural and religious differences is already required for school system employees; however, Meyers and other athletic officials are not considered MCPS employees.

One MCPS employee who was criticized for the decision was meet director Tom Rogers, a track and field coach at Walter Johnson High School in Bethesda. Rogers was blamed by some for upholding the decision not to let Kelly participate.

‘‘There has been an enormous barrage of angry and even threatening letters,” Harrison said.

But it was never Rogers’ role to say who was allowed to compete, she said.

‘‘His role was as an administrator, to take care of the business aspects,” Harrison said.

Rogers was in charge of making sure the track and equipment was ready, sending out the invitations and hiring the officials, among other duties.

Makhdoom believes an exception could have been made for Kelly.

‘‘She has sacrificed quite a bit of her religious beliefs and compromised to participate,” he said.

‘‘Our religious beliefs are such that women, especially, are not supposed to show the body. I would call it a compromise,” he said of the garment Kelly wore. While it covered her skin, it was still tighter than clothes traditional Muslim women wear, he said.

The perception that Kelly was singled out for her religion is damaging for community relations between Muslims and others, he said.

In years past, several runners have competed in the Montgomery Invitational wearing head coverings, including Shakira Raheem, who competed for Albert Einstein High School before graduating in 2007, and Fatima Abbas, who ran for Rogers at Walter Johnson before graduating in 1999.

‘‘The head covering itself was never a violation,” Rogers said. ‘‘Fatima ran with a hejab for four years, and she never had any problems.”

He said there was another athlete, a boys hurdler from James Robinson High School in Virginia, who was not allowed to compete at the Montgomery Invitational this month because of uniform violations similar to Kelly’s.

‘‘The torso of [Kelly’s] undergarment was multicolored, which was the same problem that the kid from Robinson had,” Rogers said. ‘‘The implication was religious discrimination, but that was absolutely not the case. It is a very one-sided view that has been out there and that has been hurtful.”

Maryland Community Newspapers Online

http://www.gazette.net/stories/013008/montnew64001_32378.shtml

February 10, 2008 12:48 AM
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