Muslim woman sues after boss refuses to allow her head scarf

Orlando, USA - A Muslim woman is suing a Florida real estate company for religious discrimination after being told she could not wear a head scarf and long sleeves at work.

Danine Hammond, 27, of Orlando, said the office manager of Chapel Trace Apartments told her she couldn't wear her hijab, a head scarf donned by some Muslim women.

Hammond is suing the Miami-based Housing Trust Management Co., which owns the Chapel Trace complex, under Florida's Civil Rights Act and requesting that the company compensate her for lost pay and benefits, punitive and compensatory damages, and legal fees, according to the lawsuit.

"I feel I have the right to work here in the U.S., and I shouldn't have to compromise my religion," Hammond said during a news conference Wednesday at the entrance to the complex, where she lives.

Employees at the complex would not comment. Representatives from the Housing Trust Group did not return phone calls.

The conflict began last April, when Hammond reported for her first day of work as a leasing agent for Chapel Trace.

"You cannot work here dressed like that," Hammond remembers office manager Olga Sierra telling her. Employees were required to wear a uniform - a short-sleeved shirt and pants - and could not wear head scarves, Hammond said she was told.

"She assumed that I would take it off," Hammond said. When Hammond refused to remove her head scarf and asked Sierra to check with a supervisor about accommodating her religious customs, Sierra told Hammond to go home, according to the lawsuit.

"I was in shock," Hammond said. "I went home bawling my eyes out." No one ever called her, the suit said.

Hammond then turned to the Council on American-Islamic Relations, a Muslim civil liberties group. The organization tried contacting the company for months without getting a response, said Ahmed Bedier, director of the organization's Central Florida office.

On Aug. 23, 2004, Hammond filed a discrimination complaint with the Florida Commission on Human Relations. In February, the commission found there were grounds for the complaint, allowing her to pursue further action.

Hammond's is among other recent allegations of workplace discrimination against Muslims:

_A former Walt Disney World employee sued the theme park in May 2004 for not allowing her to wear a hijab when she worked as a bellhop and salesclerk at Disney's Caribbean Beach Resort.

_In 2003, a Tampa woman filed Equal Employment Opportunity complaints against the state Department of Health, claiming her supervisor treated her differently after she converted to Islam and wore a head scarf.

"Right now, in the post-911 era, it seems to be popular for corporations to discriminate against Muslims," Bedier said. "These lawsuits are essential to send a message to corporations in America and Florida: You cannot discriminate."

Most cases the American-Islamic council deals with rarely reach the lawsuit level, Bedier said. "The law is on the individual's side to protect religious rights," Bedier said. Like the Federal Civil Rights Act of 1964, Florida law prohibits employers from discriminating based on religion when it comes to hiring or firing an individual.