Last fall, city officials confirmed the image would be removed in the name of secularism following complaints that it was offensive.
Oh?

Please, Montreal City Hall, share with the class what’s offensive about that image.
I lived for some time in a Muslim culture country. It was officially secular: about 30% of women wore western clothes, with or without head coverings, others wore a sari (a proportion of the population was Hindu), still others wore the shalwar kameez, some were in hijabs, with or without abaya, some in chadors, or niqabs, some chose the burqa. I wore the hijab because it protected me from the sun. I was part of many discussions: the pious wanted us all in burqa, others had arguments for their choices, and the non-religious demanded I take off my hijab because I was encouraging oppression, yet many of the women I knew who wore hijab were not even remotely religious: it was just their take on their culture.
I don’t care, one way or the other, about religion or the French fixation on anti-clericalism/secularism, but I do care about women making their own choices in a democracy. I am not sure how the francophone fixation on banning religious symbols, whatever the religion, sits with that. I wonder, too, did the almost universally male anti-clericals of the 19th and 20th century ever bother to ask a woman for her opinion?
All that matters is the stereotypical drama to be entertained by …instead of just living and “being”. /S
Not sure where I stand on this issue, but I am leaning towards that it shouldn’t have been removed for being “offensive”.
Anyway, on a slightly related topic, hijab is a pretty complex issue. It is both a symbol of religious freedom, and of religious oppression. In many parts of the world, women are forced to wear it, and in some other parts of the world, women are forbidden from wearing it. Even in places that have more freedom wrt this issue, women might be forced by their families to wear it.
I am quite pleased with this change.
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Ew
Let’s just say that I have a certain “vision” of Montreal and that the image of the woman that was removed doesn’t fit into this “vision.”
Wtf.




