Bangladeshi residents and others in Monfalcone say decisions to prohibit worship at cultural centres and banning burkinis at the beach is part of anti-Islam agenda

The envelope containing two partially burned pages of the Qur’an came as a shock. Until then, Muslim residents in the Adriatic port town of Monfalcone had lived relatively peacefully for more than 20 years.

Addressed to the Darus Salaam Muslim cultural association on Via Duca d’Aosta, the envelope was received soon after Monfalcone’s far-right mayor, Anna Maria Cisint, banned prayers on the premises.

“It was hurtful, a serious insult we never expected,” said Bou Konate, the association’s president. “But it was not a coincidence. The letter was a threat, generated by a campaign of hate that has stoked toxicity.”

Monfalcone’s population recently passed 30,000. Such a positive demographic trend would ordinarily spell good news in a country grappling with a rapidly declining birthrate, but in Monfalcone, where Cisint has been nurturing an anti-Islam agenda since winning her first mandate in 2016, the rise has not been welcomed.

  • @[email protected]
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    499 months ago

    I can see how banning the Burkini in indoor pools makes sense from a hygienic perspective, but banning them on public beaches is just to take something enjoyable away from a specific group of people.

    • crossmr
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      299 months ago

      France is pretty strict on that. Apparently men can’t wear trunk style swimming bottoms. I’m not sure how they handle the burkini vs rashguard issue. I know rashguards are very popular with a lot of east asians because they worry about skin cancer.

    • @Linkerbaan
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      9 months ago

      People pee in the pool. I doubt a Burkini is going to make the hygienic difference.

      • @[email protected]
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        219 months ago

        Hard agree. Pools are gross—anyone getting in one knows that and accepts it. I’ll take a lady in a burkini over an unattended child any day.

    • @[email protected]
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      169 months ago

      How is burkini different from a swimming suit that would warrant banking them from indoor pools?

      • @[email protected]
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        9 months ago

        You usually use the public shower before entering the pool and wearing a burkini in there kinda defeats the point. For the same reason you’re not allowed to wear anything other than regular swimwear.

        • @mmcintyre
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          179 months ago

          I don’t understand how wearing a burkini defeats the point of the shower. A burkini is swimwear.

          • stevecrox
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            9 months ago

            The shower before a pool is to ensure people aren’t entering the pool coated in dirt (e.g. sweat, hair, dead skin, etc…).

            The chemicals in a pool are designed to bind to that dirt and kill any bacteria introduced.

            There is a limit to the chemicals you can add to a pool (before it hurts humans) and once the amount has activated you need to drain the pool and refill it.

            Swimming pools hold crazy amounts of water which is also really expensive to heat up, so pools want to do that as little as possible.

            Clothing interfers with cleaning your body, so people entering near fully clothed (e.g. like a Burkina) will likely introduce more dirt into the pool.

            That translates into increased costs for swimming pools or pools which maintain the old schedule and just operate unsafely.

            This is all based on owning a hot tub and learning how to maintain it.

            Hopefully this also explains why it doesn’t matter people enter the sea fully clothed

            • @mmcintyre
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              169 months ago

              Dude, I own a pool. What do you think a burkini is made out of, wool?

              • stevecrox
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                9 months ago

                You seem to be intentionally missing the point, but to reiterate…

                You shower before entering a pool to wash the dirt from your body off (your cleaning yourself).

                The more of your body covered the less effective that shower is.

                Ideally everyone would be naked in the shower, but there are probably outfits which increasingly render the shower less and less effective (e.g. speedos are better than shorts, etc .).

                It would not surprise me if a Burkina covered so much that the cleaning shower is rendered pointless

                • @Linkerbaan
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                  9 months ago

                  Everything here is wishful thinking. Ain’t nobody showering. People jump straight into the pool.

                  A pool is a giant chlorine bath. If a shower right before jumping in would make a difference someone would need to not have showered for multiple days in advance. Which is a bigger problem by itself.

                  It’s a giant non issue and you’re grasping at straws.

                • @[email protected]
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                  109 months ago

                  Is there any data to show that the amount of extra dirt potential is actually enough to worry about? Seems like only a fraction of the people using the pool would be wearing them, and the end result would be no worse than a child who sneezed a booger in it.

                  Idk man, I understand the point you’re trying to make, but it all seems like thinly veiled bullshit to me (the law, not your words).

                • @Blue_Morpho
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                  39 months ago

                  The more of your body covered the less effective that shower is.

                  No one showers before going in a public pool. You are right that it would be hygenic but it’s not done by anyone. Furthermore elderly wear long sleaved swimsuits that are functionally the same as a birkini. The only difference is the hair covering. A hair covering improves hygiene of a public pool by not having stray hairs floating around in the same way food workers are required to wear hair nets.

              • NoIWontPickaName
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                -29 months ago

                Yes? No? Maybe?

                Do you know what they’re made of?

                Without looking it up?

                Cause I sure as hell don’t

                • @mmcintyre
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                  19 months ago

                  Of course I looked it up, I’m not about to get on here and spew bullshit like some ignorant jerkwad.

            • @[email protected]
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              9 months ago

              I’m not sure they ever empty most pools do they? They just continuously filter the water and keep adding chemicals?

              • @CinnerB
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                9 months ago

                He’s saying if someone adds 10 gallons of chlorine instead of 5 depending on amount of water the pool holds…

                Which shouldn’t happen. The guy owns a hot tub and is extrapolating that to pool water maintenance. You test the water every few days and see exactly where your levels are, and you know how much of what chemicals you need to add.

                Draining and heating pools has zero to do with a burkini. I think he just wants to argue the more fabric = more risk for contaminants introduced but went about it all the wrong way.

        • @febra
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          19 months ago

          And what’s wrong with that? How does that make it unhygienic

          • @[email protected]
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            19 months ago

            It makes it more unhygienic because there’s more fabric that carries dirt, sweat, whatever

    • nifty
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      79 months ago

      It doesn’t make sense even from a hygiene perspective, it’s just racism because no one has banned surfers and their wetsuits.