It’s difficult to say how it started. For clarity’s sake, let’s begin on 28 November 2011. Enraged at the university’s enforcement of the niqab ban, a group of Salafists took the Dean of the College of Letters at Manouba University hostage. (Students at Manouba, and at universities around the country, are prohibited by presidential decree from wearing the niqab while in class).[1]
Protestors, swelling at times to 200, came to the defense of female studentswishing to wear the niqab to exams.[2] They leafleted the campus with fliers crying, “Sister, What is Preventing You From Wearing the Niqab?” Leftist students, oftentimes members of the student political union Union Générale des Étudiantes (UGET), responded with the familiar cry of the revolution, “degage, degage.”
Campus police, an omnipresent relic of the Ben Ali era, were reintroduced and a great “he said, she said” debate ensued. French professor Habib Mellakh reported being shoved by protestors. The dean, Habib Kazdaghli, now released, was barred entry to his office by protestors. Professors rallied in defense of the niqab ban and questioned if the Salafist protestors were indeed students or outsiders. Salafist protestors continued to demonstrate for the right to wear the niqab and for on-campus prayer rooms.[3]
A week later, the faculty board closed the college. “We reached a stage where we could not negotiate with these people,” stated Dean Kazdaghli.
The New Year came and went, and not much improved on the campus. On 17 January, students wearing the niqab began a hunger strike in an attempt to have their demands met. They bemoaned the university’s flippant approach to their cause and accused the faculty of verbal abuse. Imen Ben Rouha, one of the five students on the hunger strike, said, “We are ready to sacrifice our lives for this cause. This is our right and we are open to any dialogue that can lead to a solution to this case.”
Hunger strikes ended, and the end of February ushered in faculty strikes. On 28 February, a niqab wearing student attempted to enter a classroom. Following the instructions of the university’s scientific council, the professor barred the student from entering class. As the student called upon support from Salafists both at and around the university, the faculty at the College of Letters rallied in support of their colleague and began their strike.
“Salafists are not letting us do our job. Whenever us professors try to apply the university’s law, we get physically attacked. This is not acceptable,” stated Radhia Jaidi, head of the English department. “The Faculté des Lettres is no longer a safe environment for us to teach in.”
The professors took their grievances to the Ministry of Higher Education and the General Prosecutor. Hatem Kattou, the press attaché of the Ministry of Higher Education condemned the aggression against professors and sought a speedy solution to the situation. It seemed that none was reached.
The first week of March ushered in the suspension of two niqab wearing students, Imen Ben Rouha and Faten Hajji, for their involvement in earlier riots. Objecting to the suspension, the two students went to the Dean’s office to protest. What happened next is disputed by both sides. English department head Amel Jaidi claims that the two students broke into the Dean’s office and when asked to leave, they destroyed his office. The students claimed that the Dean violently attacked them; lawyers have threatened to bring a case against the Dean.
But the niqab was just the beginning.
As Salafists rallied behind their female compatriots, one climbed up a flag post and exchanged the Tunisian flag for the black Salafist one. “One of the professors who witnessed the Tunisian flag taken down was brought to tears,” stated Manel Bejaoui, an English student at the university.
Enter the heroic female savior—this time in the flesh as opposed to her relegated position in literature: Khaoula Rashidi. Rashidi, who hails from Gafsa, is said to have climbed the wall and attempted to take down the Salafi flag, only to be beaten down. For her efforts, President Marzouki officially honored Rashidi, praising her defense of the flag, “The flag is the symbol of the country … the blood of martyrs … and the Arab-Islamic identity,” stated Marzouki. Eventually, the Salafi flag was taken down, and the Tunisian one flown again. (It should be noted that a Salafi replaced the black Salafist flag with the Tunisian flag and Mohamed Bakhti, the spokesperson of Salafist students in Manouba, denied his movement’s involvement in the flag incident.)
Manouba’s flag and niqab debates are no longer confined to the university scene. Indeed, these topics have been catapulted into a country-wide debate about Tunisian nationalism. At the 8 March 2012 Women’s Day rally, one of the women interviewed said, “Yesterday [the Salafists] crossed a line, for us the flag is sacred, it is our identity.” Other women echoed her sentiments, adding, “Men don’t risk losing their rights, but we do.”
At the National Constituent Assembly, members put small Tunisian flags on their desks in support of Rashidi’s defense of the flag. Some blamed the Dean for his mishandling of the situation, while others worried that the Salafist demonstrations and violent behavior were indicative of growing religious extremism.
Tunisian politics are dangerously slipping into an us-versus-them mentality; one can only be a secularist or a salafist. As the middle ground disappears and polarizing conversations dominate every day politics and life, the purported "Arab Spring" that was supposed to blanket Tunisia in democracy, might not be exactly what covers the country. For now, the fabric of Tunisian society is tenuously held together with the fervor of college students.
For more information, please consult:
Gaigi, Youssef. “University shut down because of disagreement about Niqab.” Tunisia Live Online 7 December 2011.
Ghribi, Asma. “Tunisians Erupt in Anger over Desecration of Flag.” Tunisia Live Online 9 March 2012.
Hassassi, Hend. “Classes Cancelled but Clashes Continue at Tunisian University.” Tunisia Live Online 30 November 2011.
Hassassi, Hend. “Leftist Student Union Scores a Landslide Victory in Tunisian Student Board Elections.”Tunisia Live Online 16 March 2012.
Le Nevez, Adam. “Women Speak Out for Their Rights in the New Tunisia.” Tunisia Live Online 8 March 2012.
Mamelouk, Dr. Douja. “Scandalous Flag Incident at Mannouba University: A Wake-up Call.” Tunisia Live Online 11 March 2012.
Mzioudet, Houda. “Manouba University To Close School of Arts, Letters, and Humanities.” Tunisia Live Online 6 December 2011.
Samti, Farah. “Classes Suspended at the Univerisyt of Manouba as ‘Niqab Dilemma’ Continues.” Tunisia Live Online 29 February 2012.
Samti, Farah. “Flag Desecration Leads to Violence at the University of Manouba.” Tunisia Live Online 7 March 2012.
Samti, Farah. “Salafists Take Hostage Dean of Tunisian University.” Tunisia Live Online 28 November 2011.
Samti, Farah. “Tunisian President Honors Student’s Defense of Tunisian Flag.” Tunisia Live Online 12 March 2012.
[1] In 1981, wearing a hijab in a public office officially became illegal. Presidential decree 108, passed in 1985, took the ban one step further, disallowing hijab at educational institutions.
[2] Many professors argue that it is difficult to teach students when you cannot see their faces. Additionally, during exams, students are required to match their face to their ID card, a task made impossible by the niqab.
[3] See Tunisia Live’s coverage on youtube.
[This article is part of the monthly critical issues briefing on Tunisia produced by the Center of Maghrib Studies in Tunis (CEMAT)]