UCI controversy may call for a more uniform solution
At UCI this week, the debate about free speech and the 1st Amendment
raged as some 30 graduating Muslim students decided last week to add
a stole to their caps and gowns that bore the shahada, words that
they say are a testament to, and symbol of, their Islamic faith.
It was the same stole that graduating students wore last year, and
the Muslim Student Union said the choice of clothing will become
traditional at future graduations.
But we have to wonder if it is not time for the university to
change the rules on what is appropriate graduation clothing and avoid
further clashes of cultures down the road.
In the recent case, pro-Israeli organizations, along with several
Newport-Mesa residents and even the Orange County chapter of the
Anti-Defamation League, loudly spoke against the stoles bearing the
shahada because of its apparent alignment with terrorist groups.
Muslims, however, say it’s no different than Christians wearing a
crucifix or Jews a yarmulke. UCI Chancellor Ralph Cicerone issued a
statement, quickly after the debate went to a national level, siding
with free speech.
“UCI is a public university with people from diverse backgrounds
who enjoy the rights and protection of the 1st Amendment,” he said in
a letter to faculty, students and staff. “Our history includes the
free and peaceful expression of political and nonpolitical ideas, no
matter how controversial.”
Cicerone made the right decision to not get caught up in the media
frenzy and make a rash decision to disallow the stoles. He was also
right in choosing to side with the 1st Amendment.
Cicerone’s letter, however, could mean that someone who wanted to
paint a swastika on his or her gown or wear a Ku Klux Klan hood,
would be protected by the same 1st Amendment. Thus UCI, would be
forced to allow it.
As we see it, the easiest way to avoid such controversiesis to
make the graduating uniform what it is -- a uniform.
Don the cap, wear the gown and end it there.
It might not allow the creative student in the architecture
program to turn his cap into a skyscraper, but it will ensure that
graduation stays off “The O’Reilly Factor” and restore the real pomp
and circumstance the graduates deserve.
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