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‘Keep it outside classroom’: tough lessons for hijab-wearing Hong Kong graduate seeking work as kindergarten teacher

  • Saana Qalsoom, 24, says she was told in a job interview that the hijab should not be worn in the classroom
  • University of Hong Kong graduate subsequently called schools to check whether they were open to hiring hijab-wearing teachers before agreeing to an interview

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Saana Qalsoom is now working as a kindergarten teacher in a school she says she found welcoming. Photo: Xiaomei Chen

After graduating from Hong Kong’s oldest university and dreaming of becoming a kindergarten teacher, Saana Qalsoom did not expect her hijab to affect her job search.

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Qalsoom, 24, said she decided to wear the head covering every day a few years ago as an expression of religious devotion, but was stunned when she was told by a principal during a job interview to take off her hijab if she wanted to get hired.

“She told me [the hijab] should not be worn in the classroom. People should, you know, keep this outside the classroom,” she said.

The face-to-face job interview with the kindergarten took place in August last year after Qalsoom graduated from the University of Hong Kong with a bachelor’s degree in applied child development.

She said the kindergarten told her that other employees with a Muslim background were willing to remove the hijab when they were at work.

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Qalsoom, of Pakistani origin, said they tried to convince her to follow suit, with reasoning such as children would snatch her hijab.

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