A Free Press
For A Free People

  Founded 1997 Edition  



WND
FAITH UNDER FIRE

Airline bans woman from wearing cross

British Airways allows Muslim headscarves, but not Christian symbols


Posted: October 15, 2006
1:00 am Eastern

By Michael Ireland
© 2010 ASSIST News Service




Nadia Eweida (Courtesy London Daily Mail)
LONDON, England – British Airways has banned a Christian woman from wearing a cross on a necklace to work, a British newspaper reports.

The Daily Mail reports that Heathrow check-in worker Nadia Eweida, who is a Coptic Christian and whose father is Egyptian and mother English, was sent home after refusing to remove the crucifix that breached British Airways' dress code.

The move has been criticized by Christian groups and Eweida's member of parliament, Vince Cable.

The Mail says Eweida, who has an unblemished record during seven years at BA, is suing her employer for religious discrimination after being suspended from work without pay for two weeks.

Eweida, 55, from Twickenham, told the paper: "I will not hide my belief in the Lord Jesus. British Airways permits Muslims to wear a headscarf, Sikhs to wear a turban and other faiths religious apparel.

"Only Christians are forbidden to express their faith. I am a loyal and conscientious employee of British Airways, but I stand up for the rights of all citizens."

(Story continues below)

The Mail says she was ordered to remove her cross or hide it beneath a company cravat by a duty manager at Heathrow's Terminal 4 last month.

She then sought permission from management to wear the chain – but was turned down.

A British Airways spokeswoman confirmed a case was ongoing but said it would be "inappropriate to discuss it in detail."


Special offers:

Classic book on USA's Christian heritage: New edition of 100-year-old treasure reveals nation's true religious

Has the cradle of Christianity lost the will to live?

Criminalizing Christianity: How America's founding religion is becoming illegal


Related stories:

'China-level' Christian persecution coming

Ruling: Voters have rights to Ten Commandments

Cross honoring vets protected

Airline bans Bibles to avoid offending Muslims

ACLU threat nixes 23rd Psalm display

High court limits commandments

'Islam will invade Europe and America'

Judge slaps library for barring cross pendant

Woman suspended for cross gets job back








Share/Bookmark      E-mail to a Friend        Printer-friendly version


  |  Page 1   |  Page 2   |  Commentary   |  WND Money   |  WND TV/Radio   |  Diversions   |  G2 Bulletin   |  About Us   |  Terms of Use   |  Privacy   |  Contact Us   |  
Copyright 1997-2010
All Rights Reserved. WorldNetDaily.com Inc.