Wednesday, February 11, 2026
ADVT 
International

Muslim Woman Fired From Work For Wearing Hijab In US

IANS, 08 Aug, 2016 01:47 PM
    In a case of alleged discrimination in the US, a young Muslim woman was fired from her job at a dental clinic for wearing a hijab as her employer wanted to keep a "neutral environment" in office.
     
    Najaf Khan, who was hired as a dental assistant at Fair Oaks Dental Care in Fairfax County, Virginia, said she was fired from the new job because she wore a Muslim head scarf to work.
     
    "I was really upset. The day that it happened, I was devastated," Najaf told NBC Washington.
     
    She did not wear the hijab for her interview or on the first two days of employment. On the third day, she chose to wear it because Najaf felt that she would stay at the job and wearing it was part of her spiritual journey.
     
    At work that day, she said the owner of Fair Oaks Dental Care, Dr Chuck Joo, told her to take off the hijab. 
     
    Joo told her that they wanted to keep a "neutral environment" in office. The employer asked her to remove it because the Islamic head scarf would offend patients and he wanted to keep religion out of the office.
     
    Khan said Joo gave her an ultimatum -- she could continue wearing the scarf and be fired or work without it. 
     
    "When I said that I would not compromise my religion for that, he held the door open for me and I walked out," Khan said.
     
    Joo was quoted as saying that open displays of religion are not allowed at his business because he wants to keep it neutral. If his employees want to wear a hat, it must be a surgical hat for sanitary reasons, Joo said.
     
    Reacting to the case, the Council on American Islamic Relations (CAIR) said, "No employee should face termination because of his or her faith or religious practices. We call on Fair Oaks Dental Care to reinstate the Muslim employee and to offer her reasonable religious accommodation as mandated by law."
     
    Najaf said she would likely refuse an offer to return to the dental office.
     
    "I was astonished because he (boss) had been saying I had been doing so well. I received an email Friday morning (July 29) saying how much positive enthusiasm I was bringing into the dental office," she told Fox News

    MORE International ARTICLES

    EgyptAir Wreckage Found Near Greek Island

    EgyptAir Wreckage Found Near Greek Island
    EgyptAir said on Thursday that Egypt' s foreign ministry confirmed to Egyptian Civil Aviation Authority that wreckages of missing airplane were found near Greek Island of Karpathos.

    EgyptAir Wreckage Found Near Greek Island

    Formerly Conjoined Twins Released From Texas Hospital

    Formerly Conjoined Twins Released From Texas Hospital
    Twin girls who were formerly conjoined below the waist have been released from a South Texas hospital.

    Formerly Conjoined Twins Released From Texas Hospital

    Victim Of Fatal, Targeted Vancouver Shooting Known To Investigators

    Victim Of Fatal, Targeted Vancouver Shooting Known To Investigators
    Sgt. Randy Fincham says the attack occurred in the city's south Cambie neighbourhood at about 10:30 Monday night.

    Victim Of Fatal, Targeted Vancouver Shooting Known To Investigators

    Canada Joins International Group Seeking Peaceful Settlement In Syria

    Canada Joins International Group Seeking Peaceful Settlement In Syria
    The International Syria Support Group includes 26 countries and organizations, including the United States and Russia, which are co-chairs of the body.

    Canada Joins International Group Seeking Peaceful Settlement In Syria

    The 'Untouchables' Of Yemen Caught In Crossfire Of War

    The 'Untouchables' Of Yemen Caught In Crossfire Of War
    They live in shantytowns on the outskirts of cities, are often refused schooling and work menial jobs like shoe-shining or street cleaning or turn to begging. Other Yemenis have traditionally called them the "Akhdam," or "servants."

    The 'Untouchables' Of Yemen Caught In Crossfire Of War

    Pakistan Sees Jihad As Low-cost Option To Bleed India: Husain Haqqani

    Pakistan Sees Jihad As Low-cost Option To Bleed India: Husain Haqqani
    Prosecution of jihadis in Pakistan is difficult as the system considers them to be "the good guys", according to Husain Haqqani, Pakistan's former envoy to the US.

    Pakistan Sees Jihad As Low-cost Option To Bleed India: Husain Haqqani