Feb. 2, 2007 WORLD & NATION Pages www.gui1fordian.coTn Greensboro. N.C. Cambodian feral woman’s past shrouded in skepticism Jewel Anderson | Staff Writer On Jan. 13, Cambodian log gers were shocked to find a naked, crouched and shaking woman in the jungle. She does not speak any recognizable language, and her identity remains a mystery. Although DNA tests have yet to be done, village police officer Sal Lou has claimed the woman as his daughter, Rochom P'ngieng, who went missing 19 years ago at the age of eight. Lou recognized her, in part, due to a scar on her left wrist. Last seen, P'ngieng was tending buffalo on the edge of the jungle in the remote northern Rattanakiri province. Lou and his family have taken the woman in absolutely con vinced that she is their long-lost child. Lou recognized the woman as his daughter because of a scar on her wrist that he says was caused by an accident with a knife when she was a child. "I recognize her face," said Rochom Soy, the alleged mother, to The Guardian. "Now that she is back home I sleep better and I boimd. a child and relived 'The Jungle have regained my appetite." First-year Mo Crumbly has her Book' story, it is a possibility that Daily, crowds of curious villag- doubts about feral-child claims, this is a feral-child case, ers and journalists flock around Crumbly thinks that the most Feral children are youth who the alleged family's hut to observe likely case is that the woman has grow up in isolation from human the woman. However, with out any objective proof of the woman's identity, many remain skeptical about who she is and what she has been through. Some believe that she sur vived for 19 years alone in the jungle. Others believe that she suffers from some form of mental illness and simply be came lost in the jungle much more recently. Some villagers think that she is an evil jungle spirit. Kek Galabru, president of a non-govemmental human rights group, said to The Wash ington Post, "We believe that this woman is the victim of some kind of torture, maybe sexual or physical." The scar that Lou used to iden- bbc.co.uk The girl found in the forests of Rat tanakiri PROVINCE IN Cambodia is believed to HAVE BEEN LIVING IN THE WILD FOR 19 YEARS. contact and who lack language and social skills. Such cases are very rare but do occur. Supporting the feral-child claim are local police reports describing the woman as "half animal and half-human." Ac cording to BBC News, when the woman's alleged father first saw her, she was naked and walking like a monkey. First-year Timothy Lind- berg marveled at how tough a woman would have to be to survive alone in the wilder ness for nearly two decades. "If it really is her, that's amazing," said Lindberg. There are others, like Karen Hayes, assistant professor of psy- experienced severe abuse or tor ture. "It sounds sketchy. How would chology, who are also skeptical an 8-year-old survive in the wil- about the woman's identity, tify the woman is apparently demess?" Gmmbly said. "It's like "We don't really know any- tiny compared to deep scars cir- 'The Jimgle Book.'" thing other than that this person cling her left wrist and ankle that Although it seems unlikely appeared," Hayes said. "(How- may have been caused by being that the woman disappeared as ever, if this is a feral-child case) it would make sense that she would be probably presenting sounds that are like an infant. We know those kinds of sounds are universal." The woman's alleged family hopes that with time the woman will be able to speak again and will return to school. Hayes said that with the appropriate inter ventions the woman might be able to regain her verbal skills and receive an education. Despite the family's warmth towards their alleged daughter, Lou and Soy have told report ers that the woman has tried to escape, presumably to return to the jungle, and that they must guard her at night. The woman's alleged father has agreed to have DNA tests done to prove that the woman is his daughter. Yet Lou has been reluctant for a test to be per formed, according to The Guard ian. Since the woman cannot speak and is almost entirely non- communicative, her true story remains undiscovered. Muslim educator suspended for refusing to remove veil Deena Zaru I Staff Writer Muslim teaching assistant Ms. Aishah Azmi, 23, was suspended for refusing to take off her veil in the classroom by the Headfield Church of England Junior School, in Dews bury, U.K. Some school officials believe that Azmi's black veil, which reveals only her eyes, is a communication barrier that alienates her from her students. Azmi argues that she had agreed to remove the veil in the classroom, as long as it was not in front of her male colleagues. Local government minister Mr. Phil Woolas said to Al-Jazeera: "(Azmi) should be sacked. She put herself in a position where she can't do her job." Ms. Azmi's lawyer, Nick Whitting- ham, called for Woolas to withdraw his comments, since they might influ ence Azmi's employment tribunal. Azmi told BBC that the veil has never before been a barrier between her and the children. "The children are aware of my body language, my eye expressions, the way I'm saying things," Azmi said. "If people think it is a problem, what about blind children? They can't see anything but they have a brilliant ed ucation, so I don't think my wearing the veil affects the children at all." "Ms. Azmi is very well able to carry out her role as a teaching assis tant providing support to pupils who speak English as a second language," Whittingham said to a BBC reporter. "She has demonstrated in a number of interviews that she can commu nicate effectively while wearing the veil." "My own position would be to agree with (Azmi)," said Assistant Professor of religious studies and women's studies Jane Redmont. "I gather from the story that the stu dents don't feel the veil is a barrier. a veil during her live job interview, which was conducted by both a fe male and a male. Azmi justified her not wearing the veil in front of a male governor of the and the primary concern in a school school to a BBC reporter. GUARDIAN.CO.UK RESTRICTION MAY POINT TO POLITICAL AND EDUCATIONAL DISCRIMINATION IN THE UNITED KINGDOM. should be the total well being of the students." Associate Professor of Education Studies David Hildreth highlighted the importance of considering the ages of the students Azmi taught as part of deciding whether the veil is a distraction. "Children this age really want to try to be accepted, and if some stu dents make a big deal about the veil then it might become a focal point for other students," said Hildreth. Azmi did not volunteer to the school administration the fact that she wears a veil, and she did not wear "Yes, there was a male, but (my veil was off) for only about five minutes, and there was a female in the room," said Azmi. "I'm not sure whether the veil causes a barrier in communication," said Hildreth, "because you have to look at every situation in context and examine the culture of the school." Azmi said, "I didn't realize that the veil would be perceived as a prob lem because this is a mainly Muslim school and the female parents wear it ... if I had known it would be a prob lem I would have said something." "If the majority of the students were familiar with (the veil) then it is very possible that the veil was not a distraction," said Hildreth. Even though school officials in sisted that Azmi's suspension was not motivated by anti-Islamic sentiments, Al-Jazeera reported that senior Brit ish politicians and the country's me dia have been accused of causing and encouraging anti-Islamic feelings to wards the wearing of veils by Mus lims in the United Kingdom. "The body integrity and the reli gious and cultural integrity of the teacher are very important," said Redmont. "As long as the children's learning and level of comfort does not suffer, (Azmi) should be allowed to wear the veil." Muslim Hussam Dakkak, a London college student, said in a telephone interview: "It is very disrespectful towards Islam for people to underes timate the meaning of the veil. Just because some Westerners do not iden tify with it, does not give them the right to discriminate against women who wear it." "The U.K. is struggling with what it means to be a multi-faceted cultur al and religious country," said Red mont. "You really have to look at the symbolic power of wearing a full veil because currently there is an issue with Islam and an issue with Arabic cultures in the West." "One of the jobs of educators is to teach students to be open-minded and be accepting of other cultures," said Hildreth. "This could have been a situation for the school to teach the students about different cultures and that there are things that make us all unique and we should celebrate them."