Kids & Family
Muslim Kids In Hijabs, Cotton Kicked Out Of Delaware Pool
Wilmington mayor says a pool manager who kicked Muslim kids out of pool used "poor judgment" and the city "should be held accountable."

WILMINGTON, DE β The mayor of Wilmington, Delaware, says his city βshould be held accountableβ for the βpoor judgmentβ that resulted in a group of Muslim children being kicked out of a public pool because they werenβt suitably dressed. The children were wearing cotton shorts, shirts and hijabs, which the manager of the pool said was against a policy.
But Tahsiyn A. Ismaaβeel, who owns and runs the Darul-Amaanah Academy and is director of its summer Arabic enrichment program, told news outlets sheβs been bringing students to the Foster Brown public pool in Wilmington for four years and no one has ever questioned their attire.
Ismaaβeel told the Delaware News Journal there were no posted rules prohibiting cotton and that other kids were wearing cotton. She said she thought her students were being discriminated against because they are Muslim, and told the newspaper she's been harassed by pool management on two prior occasions this summer.
Find out what's happening in Wilmingtonfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
She questioned the pool manager about why the Muslim children were treated differently, βand then it became, βOh, the pool is overcapacity so you need to leave.' β
The manager called a police officer, who routinely sits in a patrol car in the parking lot, into the pool area to inquire of Ismaaβeel what time she and her group would be leaving.
Find out what's happening in Wilmingtonfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
βShe said there are people waiting to get in and waiting for you to leave," Ismaaβeel said of the officer.
John Rago, the mayor's deputy chief of staff for policy and communication, said in a statement that swimmers are expected to wear proper attire β though the published rules donβt specify what βproper attireβ is beyond a prohibition against cut-off jeans. State regulations state that bathing suits are βrecommendedβ at public pools, but neither code makes any mention of cotton.
Rago said rules and regulations are βdesigned to ensure the safety of those who use the pools.β
βAmong the safety considerations is the fact that cotton becomes heavy when wet and weighs swimmers down,β Rago said in the statement. βCotton also strains the pool filtration system more than proper swimwear.β
In her interview with the News Journal, Ismaaβeel said she is communicating the rule with the children of the parents, but pool-friendly religious garments can be expensive and many of the parents live in poverty.
βKids wear what they have,β she told me the newspaper. βTo me, it was heartbreaking to have kids taken out of the pool. ... They were completely confused.β
If cotton is a problem, she said the camp will find a way to comply with the rule, but added policies should be clearly posted and enforced citywide.
βYou don't just spring it on them,β she told the newspaper. βMake people aware and donβt treat them like this. ... (Children) don't know about the adults' politics or policies. Kids want to have fun.β
Wilmington Mayor Mike Purzycki said he hopes to meet with Ismaaβeel and the children involved so he can give a personal apology for the managerβs conduct, which he said volates the cityβs long-standing policy that all people are welcome at public pools. It was wrong that the Muslim children were asked to leave because they were wearing clothing in keeping with their religion.
Purzycki said the city used poor judgment in assessing this entire matter and equally poor judgment in reacting to it.
βWe should be held accountable for what happened and how poorly we assessed this incident,β the mayor said in a statement. βI apologize to the children who were directed to leave a city pool because of the religious-required clothing they were wearing. We also referred to vaguely-worded pool policies to assess and then justify our poor judgment, and that was also wrong.β
Purzycki emphasized in the statement that religious-related clothing is permitted at city pools.
Photo: Renee Schiavone / Patch
Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.