NEWARK POLICE CHANGE URLES TO ALLOW MUSLIM OFFICERS TO WEAR HIJABS ON DUTY
Newark police change rules to allow Muslim officers to wear hijabs on duty
Female Muslim police officers will no longer be barred from wearing a hijab as part of their uniform, Newark officials announced Thursday.
“To be able to recognize people’s religion, how they practice it, and allow them to do that safely and appropriately on their work site, speaks volumes to where we’re going as a department,” Mayor Ras Baraka told reporters at a press conference announcing the policy change.

Newark Mayor Ras Baraka speaks at a press conference in Newark announcing that officers of the muslim faith are welcome to add hijabs to their uniforms. Thursday, April 29, 2021.John Jones | For NJ Advance Media
A hijab or headscarf is a traditional head covering worn by Muslim women as a sign of modesty.
“It is part of her religious requirement for the woman to wear it — as long as she’s out of her home, in public, she’s required to wear a head covering,” Daud Haqq, an imam at the NIA Masjid & Community Center and the president of the Imams Council of Newark, told NJ Advance Media. “To give it up is like giving up part of your religion.”
Haqq called the change a step in the right direction toward creating a more inclusive police force and helping recruit more Muslim women to become officers. Currently, the Newark Police Department is made up of 34 percent Black officers, 45 percent Hispanic officers and 21 percent white officers. Of the entire force, 22 percent are female officers. A spokesperson for the city did not provide the percentage of Muslim officers on the force.

