• Many Internet users claim that teachers and students with an immigrant background have banned short dresses in a high school in Bavaria.

  • The sources cited are two well-known far-right sites, which unfortunately take over a German news site.

  • In reality, the teachers of this school have complained of a slackening in the outfits of the pupils and people of immigrant origin are only mentioned by the school director to show the openness of this one and its consideration of all sensitivities.

For the past few days, numerous publications on social networks have claimed that teachers and students with an immigrant background have banned short dresses and skirts in a high school in Bavaria, in the south-east of Germany.

“Well, here we are!

Now, Western societies must lower themselves to meet the moral demands of stuck immigrants unable to desexualize their view of girls' bodies!

This is the kind of comments that are attached to this information.

The sources cited are mainly two far-right sites, Fdesouche and Invahis.com, which themselves take up an article from a German site Merkur.de.

FAKE OFF

The article of the German site in question of May 15 evokes a conflict situation in the high school-college of the city of Ebersberg, located a few kilometers from Munich.

The school and the students are said to be in disagreement over the dress code after some teachers complained to the director, Markus Schmidl, about the clothing of the students.

With “more summery” temperatures, students would wear looser clothing.

The article also mentions too short skirts, torn pants and "too free" bellies.

The incident had already been reported by the

Süddeutsche Zeitung

on May 6.

The newspaper already spoke of teachers who had "emphasized that bare stomachs and shoulders were 'taboo'".

This position would have created a conflict between the teaching team, some of the students who want the rules to be applied and those who regret that the students are “sexualized by their clothes”.

At no time in this article is the question of teachers or students with an immigrant background addressed.

The school director refutes the idea of ​​a dress code and speaks only of the internal regulations in force since 2007 which stipulate that students must wear “appropriate and non-offensive clothing”.

People with an immigrant background are just one example

The question of professors and students with an immigrant background is well addressed in Merkur's paper, but not in the sense given to it on social networks.

In reaction to the demands of the pupils, Markus Schmidl replies that his school represents a “society open to the world”.

To support his point, he adds that his school welcomes people of immigrant origin, whether teachers or foreign students, and that he wants to take all cultures into account.

These comments support those he made to the

Süddeutsche Zeitung

saying that he had to take into account all sensitivities, including that of the teachers, hence the existence of internal regulations.

Contacted by

20 Minutes

, Markus Schmidl confirms his statements and refers us to an interview he gave to the

Süddeutsche Zeitung

and published on May 13: “There is no old or new dress code.

There is no code at all.

It was a communication misunderstanding.

“According to the director, the teachers have simply noted a relaxation in the clothing of the students since the start of the health crisis and the confinement.

He also said that the school has a mission of instruction and education: "After all, you can't go to the office later in beach clothes," he added.

The situation has since calmed down since the students note “a positive evolution and an openness to dialogue”.

“We feel that the school wants to work with the students,” the student spokesperson told the

Süddeutsche Zeitung.

World

United States: A school that forced girls to wear skirts all year ordered to change its rules

French Cup

Long skirt deemed ostentatious: Rossignol believes that we have "protected the others" schoolgirls

  • World

  • fake-off

  • Germany

  • Education

  • Garment

  • Far right