France has a long tradition of expecting newcomers to assimilate into French culture rather than keep their own traditions, including public displays of religious faith. By contrast, the U.S. has traditionally been more accepting of religious traditions brought by immigrants.
Aggravating the situation in France are the recent terrorist attacks, including those in Paris last November that killed 130 people and an attack that killed 86 people on the French Riviera on Bastille Day, France’s independence day, on July 14. Anxiety in the wake of the attacks prompted officials to enact the burkini bans.
In late August, the media began to take notice. A French magazine reported that three police officers in Cannes, a famous Riviera resort, surrounded a young woman wearing a tunic (a long, loose-fitting shirt), leggings, and a head-scarf. The officers fined the woman, who was a third-generation French citizen, and told her to leave the beach. A similar incident in the city of Nice was captured by a photographer, and those photos (above), published in two British newspapers, set off a debate on social media.
Some Twitter users posted photos of nuns wading into the water wearing their habits and wondering whether the French police “would make these ladies take their clothes off too.” (The photos turned out to be from Brazil, not France.)The language in the beach bans mentions neither burkinis nor any other garments by name, but there have been no reported cases of Catholic nuns or members of any other religious group being asked to remove their outfits.