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by throwmex 2548 days ago
> The drivers, who followed Sikh traditions by wrapping their uncut hair in turbans, said bosses asked them to remove the turbans.

Ironically, Quebec has made it a law now.

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/montreal/quebec-laicity-secul...

5 comments

It's against the site guidelines to use HN for political battle or predefined agendas. It's a particularly serious abuse to use multiple accounts to do it.

When people abuse HN like this, we eventually ban their main account as well, so please stop and don't do it again.

https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html

Ontario has a law allowing Sikhs to wear turbans instead of motorbike helmets:

https://globalnews.ca/news/4533568/ontario-government-to-exe...

> ban public workers in positions of authority from wearing religious symbols.

> public workers

public worker in a position of authority

So it applies only to specific subsets of public roles (police, judge, etc).

It also applies to teachers, but I am not sure this was a good idea.

Switzerland has a similar law too https://www.swissinfo.ch/eng/church-and-state_geneva-secular...

France's laws are a lot more universal I thought, not limited to certain jobs.
Following the footsteps of the mother country I guess.

I wonder why does rest of Canada allows Québec to act as a rogue province.

IIRC, Some sects of Sikhs do not insist (or perhaps even shun) the wearing of the turban. I think the original core population of Sikhs that emigrated to Canada were mostly these non-Khalsa Sikhs.
I'd say this is not entirely correct. There is no sect of Sikhism that shuns the turban to the best of my knowledge. And, I think there is this gross misunderstanding that you have to wear the turban to be a Sikh. As a Khalsa, you have to have unshorn hair, and turban is a practical way to cover it up. In fact, turban isn't mandatory when looking at the technicalities (there are a lot of Sikhs who might disagree with me on this). The Kes (unshorn hair) are. And, that too is a requirement only for Khalsa. I'm a Sikh (not Khalsa), but I keep unshorn hair and wear a turban because I like it. And, there are a lot of people like myself. A lot of non-Khalsa Sikhs wear turbans as a step towards the path to becoming a Khalsa.
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Not sure how you got that from that link. There's a whole section on different religious associations. It points out that it's a religious requirement for Sikhs - observant baptised Sikhs are required to wear a turban.