MADRID: A Moroccan girl was allowed to return to school in Spain last week after briefly being expelled for wearing the Muslim headscarf, but the incident has sparked a national debate over the traditional head cover in the mainly Roman Catholic country.
       
Two weeks ago a public school in the town of Gerona in the rich northeastern region of Catalonia said Shaima Saidani (9), could not attend classes wearing the headscarf, or hijab, as it was against its norms.
       
The girl returned to school on Tuesday after Catalonia's regional government ruled that her right to an education was more important than the institution's norms, which it said amounted to discrimination.
       
"I don't understand it because I am the same as the other girls and I am not hurting anyone," Shaima told Catalan daily newspaper 'El Periodico' when asked if she understood why she had been prevented from attending school.
       
Shaima, who says she wants to be a doctor, lived most of her life with her grandmother in Morocco where she received a religious education. Her parents say it is her decision to wear the headscarf.
       
The Socialist government of Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero reaffirmed its opposition to a ban on the use of headscarves in public schools, calling Shaima's case 'unique'.
       
But the main opposition conservative Popular Party and the regional moderate Catalan nationalists CiU both called for a law regulating the use of the hijab.
       
"All people who live in Spain have the obligation to respect our juridical order, our laws and our values," Popular Party leader Mariano Rajoy said on Thursday.