No Islamic School Will Entertain Christian Values and Doctrines in Ghana: Let’s Be Honest About Religious Freedom in Islamic Schools
No Islamic School Will Entertain Christian Values and Doctrines in Ghana: Let’s Be Honest About Religious Freedom in an Islamic Schools .
As a Muslim, you want fairness. But you also want honesty. When we talk about religious freedom in an Islamic school, we must face the facts. No Islamic senior high school in Ghana will allow traditional worshippers or idol worshippers to set up a shrine on campus in the name of freedom of religion. That is the reality.
The Simple Truth
Every school with a religious identity sets boundaries to protect its values. Islamic schools follow Islamic principles. They don’t allow practices that contradict those principles. This is the same way mission schools protect their Christian identity.
Using Islamic Senior High as an Example
Ask yourself: Can a traditionalist walk into Islamic SHS and request a space for rituals?
Can they set up a shrine, burn incense, or perform rites during school hours?
Can they demand “equal space” because of freedom of worship? You know the answer. The school will not allow it. This is not hatred or discrimination. It is about the school’s identity and the values it was built to uphold.
Why This Matters in the Wesley Girls Debate
When we argue for accommodation for Muslim students, we must stay truthful.
We can ask for reasonable space for prayer or fasting.
We can push for fair treatment.
But we should not pretend that schools with strong religious foundations don’t have limits. Islamic schools too.
Being honest strengthens our argument. It removes hypocrisy from the debate.
The Bigger Point
The Constitution protects freedom of worship. But it also allows institutions to maintain their religious character. The real conversation should be about balance not about pushing narratives that ignore the truth. If we want fairness from others, we must also apply the same standard to ourselves.
By Yussif Abdul Ganiyu Inshola

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