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Malala Can Teach In Province If She Removes Headscarf, Quebec Minister Says

Jean-François Roberge isn't shying away from the religious symbols ban.
Nobel Peace Prize recipient Malala Yousafzai is seen here at the G7 Development and Education Ministers Meeting in Paris on July 5, 2019.
CHRISTOPHE PETIT TESSON via Getty Images
Nobel Peace Prize recipient Malala Yousafzai is seen here at the G7 Development and Education Ministers Meeting in Paris on July 5, 2019.

Quebec Education Minister Jean-François Roberge said Nobel Peace Prize recipient Malala Yousafzai would be able to teach in the province, as long as she didn’t wear her headscarf.

The remark made on Twitter by Roberge came after he posted a photo of himself alongside the 21-year-old activist when they met in France, where Roberge said they discussed “access to education and international development.”

The education minister was immediately called out for “shameful hypocrisy” on social media this week with many pointing out that his government recently adopted Bill 21 in Quebec. The legislation bans public sector employees in positions of authority, including teachers, police officers and judges, from wearing religious symbols at work.

He responded to the criticism he received on Twitter by voicing his support for the bill.

Roberge was asked by Montreal-based journalist Salim Nadim Valji how he would respond to Yousafzai wanting to become a teacher in Quebec. After all, the Nobel Prize recipient is regularly seen wearing a hijab.

Roberge said having Yousafzai work in Quebec would be a “huge honour,” but teachers cannot wear religious symbols while on the job in the province.

Roberge was in Paris for ministerial education meetings before the G7 summit in August.

Yousafzai was shot at the age of 15 by a Taliban gunman in response to her fight for girls’ right to education. She became an honorary Canadian citizen in 2014. The activist was invited to the House of Commons in Ottawa where she gave an inspirational address in 2017.

“I pray that you continue to open your homes and your hearts to the world’s most defenceless children and families,” she said about Canada in 2017. “And I hope your neighbours will follow your example.”

With files from Andree Lau and The Canadian Press

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