Top-rated London school taken to High Court over prayer ban

Top-rated London school taken to High Court over prayer ban

Top-rated London school taken to High Court over prayer ban

‘Britain’s strictest’ school facing judicial review after it banned pupils from praying on its premises, court hears, after privacy bid rejected.

Michaela Community School, frequently referred to as “Britain’s strictest”, is facing a High Court challenge from a pupil over a policy banning prayer rituals.

The free school in Wembley, north London, is subject to a judicial review over the policy, brought by an affected Muslim pupil who cannot be named for legal reasons.

The court heard that about 30 pupils started praying in the playground over a six-day period in March and used blazers to kneel on after they were “prohibited” from using prayer mats.

Top-rated London school taken to High Court over prayer ban
Michaela Community School is an 11–18 mixed, free secondary school and sixth form in Wembley, Greater London, England.

The school, where around half of its 700 pupils are Muslim, does not have a specific prayer room.

The ban decision was made by headteacher Katharine Birbalsingh, the former government social mobility commissioner, on March 27 last year and was later “remade” by the school’s governing body in May.

In the legal action against the free school’s governing body, the Michaela Community Schools Trust, the student claimed the decision breached her right to freedom of religion.

The pupil told the court the rule had “fundamentally changed” how she feels “about being a Muslim in this country”.

She described the ban as “like somebody saying they don’t feel like I properly belong here”, the hearing was told.

Top-rated London school taken to High Court over prayer ban
Michaela Community School was established in September 2014 with Katharine Birbalsingh as headteacher and Suella Braverman as the first chair of governors. It has been described as the “strictest school in Britain”,and achieved among the best GCSE results in the nation among its first cohort of students. In both 2022 and 2023 the value-added (progress) score at GCSE was the highest for any school in England.

Representing the student, Sarah Hannett KC told the court about half of the schools roughly 700 pupils were Muslim and the policy had the “practical effect of only preventing Muslims from praying, because their prayer by nature has a ritualized nature rather than being internal”.

Jason Coppel KC, representing the school trust, is due to set out the school’s full defence to the legal challenge later on Wednesday.

A ruling is expected at a later date.

The school, opposite Wembley Park station, has been referred to as one of Britain’s strictest with Ms Birbalsingh’s controversial comments and teaching methods making headlines in the past.

 

Source: BBC

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