By Jason Magder, Postmedia
News,
Source :
http://www.vancouversun.com
MONTREAL — A number of boys in
Montreal-area community of LaSalle have been told they can no longer play
soccer because they wear religious head coverings.
Aneel Samra, 17, registered for a
house league soccer in LaSalle this year, but last Wednesday, when he went
to sign a letter accepting to play by the rules, he was told that he
wouldn’t be permitted to play if he wore his turban.
When he refused, his registration
fee for the MU 17/18 league was refunded and his season cancelled.
Samra said he has been playing
soccer for about 10 years in LaSalle and has always worn his turban. He
never had a problem prior to this year.
Samra, who is a Sikh, wears a
turban made of thin material that keeps his long hair in a bun. He was told
that if he wanted to play this year, he would have to forgot
the turban, or to wrap his hair in a hairnet approved by FIFA, the
international soccer federation.
“It’s pretty degrading to do
that,” he said. “Because the whole point of turban is to cover your head.”
Samra said he has encountered
problems with his turban before.
Though he says he is good enough,
he never bothered to try out to play on an inter-city team because he knows
he wouldn’t be permitted to play with his turban. Earlier this year, while
playing for Beurling Academy, where he attends school, a referee warned his
coach that the turban was not permitted, but the coach convinced the referee
to allow Samra to play anyway.
Samra said he knows international
soccer rules don’t allow people to wear turbans, but in the past those rules
were ignored.
Samra’s father, Karmail Singh
Samra, said he’s considering fighting the ruling, because he believes it is
discriminatory.
“If it were dangerous, I would
understand, but it’s not dangerous,” said Karmail Singh Samra. “This is
discrimination.”
Samra wasn’t the only person told
he couldn’t play. His neighbours were also forbidden to play if they wore
turbans.
“They’ve been playing since
they’re five years old,” said Gurdial Singh, whose 15- and 17-year-old sons
were told they could not play. “This is very sad.”
LaSalle minor soccer association
president Sofio Pagliaro said all boys who wear turbans have been told they
can’t play. He said the association can no longer ignore the rule because
the regional body — the Lac St. Louis Regional Soccer Association — told the
league that it will enforce the previously ignored rules.
“It’s not up to us,” said
Pagliaro. “If we decide to let these players play and a referee from the
region comes to ref that game, he is allowed to decline to ref that game,
and then we would get fined.
“We feel terrible because LaSalle
has a large community of kids who will be affected,” Pagliaro added.
The issue of allowing head
coverings in soccer leagues has drawn the ire of religious and human rights
groups in recent years.
In 2007, an Ottawa team pulled
out of a tournament in Laval after one of its players was asked to take off
her hijab.
Last summer, a Quebec referee for
the Lac St. Louis Regional Soccer Association was suspended after she
refused to remove her head scarf.
The Alberta Soccer Association
passed a resolution in 2007 allowing players to wear hijabs while playing.
Players in Ontario also are allowed to wear the head covering.
Samra said he doesn’t understand
why he’s not allowed to play while wearing the covering.
“I read somewhere that the turban
offers an unfair advantage for headers, but if anything, it would be a
disadvantage because the ball would bounce in a funny way,” he said.
The rules may soon be changing,
at least for women.
The International Football
Association Board voted in March to rescind its 2007 ban on women wearing
hijabs — a vote set to be ratified in July. It’s not known whether this
would also affect men wearing turbans.
Either way, it will be too late
to salvage Samra’s soccer season which begins next week.
“I just hope that they change the
rule to allow kids with turbans to play, because I just want to play this
summer,” Samra said.