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Dalhousie to offer emergency hijab kits after Muslim women report harassment on campus

WATCH: The Dalhousie Student Union is offering emergency hijab kits after Muslim women on campus reportedly had their hijabs pulled off and spat on. Jennifer Grudic brings us more on that story – Nov 28, 2017

The Dalhousie Student Union is offering emergency hijab kits after Muslim women on campus reportedly had their hijabs pulled off and spat on, but the university says it doesn’t expect the kits will be used.

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Amina Abawajy, president of the Dalhousie Student Union, says the emergency hijab kits come in response to harassment and violence towards Muslim women on campus.

READ MORE: Hate crimes against Muslims in Canada increase 253% over four years

Dalhousie University will begin offering emergency hijab kits. Jennifer Grudic/Global News

She says the hijab campaign, in partnership with the Nova Scotia Public Interest Research Group, is an attempt to make Muslim women feel safer on campus and to raise awareness about hate crimes against Muslims.

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A Dalhousie University spokeswoman says the school has agreed to have the hijab kits on hand with campus security officials should they be needed but it has not received any reports of headscarves being targeted.

WATCH: U.S. beauty pageant first as contestant wears hijab, burkini

Janet Bryson says the university’s expectation is that the kits won’t have to be used.

Abawajy says Muslim women may not feel comfortable reporting incidents but that Islamophobia is on the rise.

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