http://www.gwynne-dyer.com/The backlash in the Arab world has been so strong that the satellite news channel Al-Jazeera, which never allows its presenters to wear anything that might indicate a particular national or religious affiliation, had to let one of its stars, Khadidja Benganna, appear on-screen wearing a brightly-colored silk scarf. She was only wearing it as a symbol of protest (she fled her native Algeria in 1994 because of death threats from Islamic fundamentalists), but it is a measure of how profoundly France's decision to ban the "Islamic" head scarf from schools has shocked its Arab neighbors.
French Muslims themselves are in shock, and thousands marched last weekend in Paris, Strasbourg and Avignon to protest against the law banning the display of religious symbols in state institutions that President Jacques Chirac formally proposed on Dec. 17. The law is carefully evenhanded, banning students and civil servants from wearing Christian crosses, Jewish skullcaps and political party symbols as well. But it arose out of a yearlong national controversy about head scarves in schools and it is almost universally seen as a sign of French "Islamophobia."