Crime & Safety
Attack On Hijab-Wearing Syrian Student Not A Hate Crime: Police
Police say an assault on a hijab-wearing Chartiers Valley High School student wasn't a hate crime, civil rights group says otherwise.

CHARTIERS VALLEY, PA β The nation's largest Muslim and civil rights advocacy group is asking state and federal authorities to investigate a fight that broke out in a girlsβ bathroom at Chartiers Valley High School as a hate crime. A minute-long video posted on a social media site showed a 14-year-old Syrian refugee wearing a hijab shielding herself against punches, being knocked to the floor and being repeatedly hit.
The girl was treated for a concussion and severe bruising and admitted overnight Friday to a local hospital, according to a classmate who told news outlets the attack continued after the video stopped. The Council on American-Islamic Relationsmhas asked state and federal law enforcement agencies to investigate the incident as a hate crime. CAIR-Pittsburgh is offering legal support to the studentβs family.
For now, Collier Township police said criminal charges are pending, but they wonβt include hate crime charges β a conclusion CAIR-Pittsburgh President Safdar Khwaja rejects. He thinks bias was the motivating factor in the assault, or at least exacerbated it.
Find out what's happening in Chartiers Valleyfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
βWe donβt believe the motive was random and was at the spur of the moment. We believe there was a bias,β he told television station WTAE.
At one point in the video, the aggressor said to the Muslim girl: βYouβre lucky youβre from another language, because I will crush you, [expletive].β
Find out what's happening in Chartiers Valleyfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
βItβs hard to piece [together] the audio, but some of it does sound like thereβs a statement about language,β Wasi Mohammad, the executive director of the Islamic Center of Pittsburgh, told the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. βThat was a concern.β
The school district says the maximum disciplinary action available in its policies will be enforced, but didnβt say if both students would be disciplined.
βChartiers Valley School District does not condone or tolerate violence of any kind and will enforce consequences to the fullest extent, according to district policies and procedures,β the district said in a statement to the Post-Gazette.
Khwaja told the Post-Gazette the school districtβs response should go beyond disciplinary actions, and that the assault βshould be addressed as a violent incident with a juvenile involved.β
The school district should provide βsome degree of trainingβ to encourage more tolerant behavior on the part of students, he said. The Washington, D.C.-based national organization reports βan unprecedented spike in bigotry targeting American Muslims, immigrants and members of other minority groups since the election of Donald Trump as president.β
The video was posted on Facebook by high school senior Alexis Work, who told WTAE the fight started when another student wanted to βvapeβ with an e-cigarette in the stall. The Muslim girl said that wasnβt allowed and the fight ensued, Work said. She wasnβt present when the altercation occurred, but received the video from another student
Work said she decided to share the video to encourage change.
βI want things to be different so that girls arenβt being bullied in the bathroom,β Work told the Post-Gazette.
The video was widely shared, βbut a lot of our students have to face this every day without that level of exposure and without any hope for a remedy,β Mohammad told the Post-Gazette.
The girl and her family moved to the United States from Syria a few years ago after they spent two years in a refugee camp, Khwaja told WTAE.
βThey were fleeing anarchy, violence, and the complete breakdown of the social system, governing system so they came to a civilized place and we all assured them this is the most civilized place in the world,β Khwaja said. βTo see this kind of violence take place, itβs very disappointing.β
Photo via Shutterstock
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