Bearded student barred from appearing for exam

14 April,2011 08:38 AM IST |   |  Kranti Vibhute and Bipin Kokate

Disabled student goes missing after being sent home from school for sporting a beard; returns home late at night


Disabled student goes missing after being sent home from school for sporting a beard; returns home late at night

Tabish Patel (15), a student with a grade VII learning disability, went missing from the Society for Rehabilitation of Crippled Children's organisation, Centre for Child Development (CCD), after he was reportedly sent home for arriving at the centre with an unshaven beard. Tabish's family panicked and lodged a missing person's case at the Tardeo police station. The boy returned home at 8 pm yesterday.

Click here to view video

Hairy matters

Tabish was scheduled to appear for his mathematics paper at 8 am at the centre.

According to his uncle Junaid Patel, Tabish had been reprimanded by school authorities for his unkempt condition a week back, and asked to present himself clean-shaven.


Tabish Patel and his uncle Junaid


Junaid said, "During his exam, a teacher pulled him up for his unshaven beard and asked him to leave the premises. He left the school grounds, but did not return home.

The school informed us only at 10 am, after the exam had been concluded, that he had been sent home for his bedraggled appearance.

It was only when they enquired if he had reached home, that we realised he was missing. We registered a missing person's case at Tardeo police station, and lodged a complaint against the school."

A school official was summoned to the police station.

He claimed that Tabish had been barred from completing the exam, not because of his scruffy appearance, but because the assignments in his notebook were incomplete. He further said, "Tabish, who suffers from a learning disability, needs a writer for exams.
u00a0
A doctor at Nair Hospital has certified this. The centre, however, did not allow him to avail the help of a writer. We felt that his confidence would be boosted if he wrote the paper himself."

A police official from Tardeo police station confirmed that Junaid Patel had registered a missing person's complaint, in which he had detailed the reasons why the boy had left the school.
u00a0
He also said that the school had sent them a report in writing, putting forward its own version of the story.

After keeping his family on tenterhooks all day, the boy finally returned home at 8 pm last evening.

Clinical psychologist Dr Trupti Jayin, who runs Violet Wings at Andheri, said, "When a child is enrolled at a special centre, it means he has special needs.
u00a0
The centre is duty-bound to take special care of the child. The child should not have been forced to make his way home all by himself. The centre should have asked his parents to fetch him."

The Other Side
Vijay Mahajan, another official from CCD, refused to give details on the issue. He said, "I am not aware of the issues involved, and cannot comment." He also refused to provide contact numbers of other officials at the centre.

SC Judgment
Madhya Pradesh schoolboy Mohammed Salim, a Class X student of Nirmala Convent Higher Secondary School, was expelled in 2008, because he flouted school regulations by sporting a beard. The school expelled Salim in July, 2008, after he refused to shave his beard on religious grounds. Salim eventually moved the Supreme Court. Salim's counsel B A Khan cited Article 25 of the Constitution, which guarantees all citizens the fundamental right to practice and propagate religion. The court issued a notice to the school to revoke the expulsion in 2009.

"Exciting news! Mid-day is now on WhatsApp Channels Subscribe today by clicking the link and stay updated with the latest news!" Click here!
Tabish Patel Disabled student CCD Bearded student exam