Kerala: School reopens after Hijab controversy, complainant student absent
Press Trust of India | October 15, 2025 | 01:13 PM IST | 2 mins read
Kerala: According to school sources, the Class 8 student, whose parents had insisted on wearing a religious headscarf, was absent due to health reasons.
KOCHI: A church-run public school in Palluruthy here reopened on Wednesday after a two-day closure prompted by a dispute over a student's right to wear hijab. The class eight student whose parents insisted on her wearing the religious headscarf was absent due to health reasons, school sources said.
In the wake of the controversy, the management of St Rita's Public School had declared a holiday on Monday and Tuesday.
A large number of police personnel were deployed in the school premises on Wednesday morning, and media personnel were not permitted inside the campus. State General Education Minister V Sivankutty reaffirmed the student's right to wear a hijab and said, "The student can attend the classes wearing a hijab until she and her parents decide otherwise."
He emphasised that students' rights are guaranteed by the Constitution and educational laws in the country and in the state.
However, Joshy, the president of the Parents Teachers' Association (PTA) of the school, said they were yet to receive any order from the government in this regard. He said it was unclear whether the minister was referring to the government-run schools or CBSE schools .
Also read 'Pay school fees digitally': MoE urges states to adopt UPI payments for ease of schooling
Two-day holiday for school
Authorities of St Rita's Public School, Palluruthy, in Kochi, had declared a two-day holiday from Monday following an escalation of a dispute with the parents of the student over her wearing the 'hijab'. The matter came to light after a letter issued by Sister Heleena Alby in this regard surfaced on social media.
In the letter, the principal had stated that, due to pressure from a student who came without the prescribed uniform, her parents, certain individuals not associated with the school, and a few students and staff members had requested leave, citing mental stress. On Tuesday, Minister Sivankuty intervened, directing the school to allow the Muslim girl to continue her education while wearing her religious headscarf. He also sought a report from the school authorities for denying her religious rights earlier, which caused her mental distress.
Follow us for the latest education news on colleges and universities, admission, courses, exams, research, education policies, study abroad and more..
To get in touch, write to us at news@careers360.com.
Quick Watch
]Next Story
]CBSE, AIIMS launch virtual mental health series for schools ahead of World Mental Health Day 2025
The World Mental Health Day is celebrated globally on October 10. The live session will be hosted via Webex at sec-cbse.webex.com. Participation is limited to 1,000 attendees per session on a first-come, first-served basis.
Suviral Shukla | 2 mins readFeatured News
]- West Bengal schools plan to reduce teaching days, adopt ‘weekly rosters’ as Census worsens teacher shortage
- ‘Affects 200’: CUET PG candidates question TISS’ normalisation formula; ‘ensures fairness,’ says institute
- VBSA Bill: Exemption to IITs ‘not desirable’; scrap deemed-university tag, plan separate funding, says panel
- ‘At Regulatory Crossroads’: Psychology courses caught in UGC, NCAHP, RCI tangle, causing confusion
- NMC drafts rules to sideline states on medical college approvals, gets tougher on infrastructure norms
- SRM Medical College bets on AI, interdisciplinary learning to make students tech-savvy, research-driven: Dean
- From IIT Madras to Kharagpur: Why top engineering colleges are now teaching biomedical sciences
- VBSA Bill: Joint Parliamentary Committee to finalise, adopt draft report on July 17
- NCAHP push for uniform allied healthcare education slowed by missing state councils, implementation gaps
- Maharashtra hostels for SC, ST students run without wardens, overcrowded; some ‘bogus’: CAG report