Muskaan Khan has inadvertently become the face of resistance for young Indian Muslim women amid an escalating row over hijabs or headscarves.
In a video that has gone viral, the 19-year-old student can be seen entering her college as a mob of men approach her. Wearing saffron shawls – a colour associated with Hinduism and Hindu nationalist groups – they started shouting “Jai Shri Ram” or “victory to Lord Ram”.
As they continued to heckle her, Ms Khan, who was wearing a hijab and a mask over a long black gown, stood her ground – she shouted “Allahu Akbar” (God is great) in return. Soon, college authorities escorted her inside.
“All that I want is to stand by my rights and education,” she told the BBC from her home in Karnataka state’s Mandya city, where the video was shot.
“I have no problems with what they wear,” she said, adding people can wear saffron stoles or turbans to college, just like she wore the hijab.
Ms Khan and millions of Muslim women in India wear the hijab and the burka every day – but the choice has turned controversial in recent weeks.
It started when students at a pre-university college, equivalent to a high school, in Karnataka’s Udupi district began protesting last month over a ban on headscarves – the college said students could wear the hijab on campus but not in the classroom.
The issue has since snowballed as other schools began implementing a similar ban – and has taken on communal overtones with supporters of Hindu nationalist groups launching protests in support of the ban.
As protests turned violent in some places, the Karnataka government closed high schools and colleges – and the matter has even reached the state’s high court. A three-judge constitutional bench is set to hear the case on Thursday.
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