Storified by straightwire · Thu, Feb 27 2014 06:46:24

When the Quebec Soccer Federation banned turbans from the playing field, they raised the ire of many Canadians and were blasted by officials outside the province and the public alike. Jasmeet Singh is one of them. The Brampton-based comic, also known as Jus Reign, has some choice words for QSF

Referee Sarah Benkirane will fight the decision that she can no longer work for Quebec's Lac St. Louis Regional Soccer Association because she wears a hijab.

Quebec Premier Pauline Marois' Charter of Values may center on secularism but some think the real point is the politics that she's creating a wedge issue to benefit the PQ's future. Today we discuss the politics behind Quebec's Charter of Values. Is the Quebec Charter of Values just about secularism?

Two non-Muslim professors are wearing the hijab to work to protest against the Parti Québécois' secular charter and its proposed ban on religious symbols for teachers, daycare workers and other public sector employees. CBC Daybreak host Mike Finnerty spoke with Concordia University history professor Nora Jaffary and McGill University political science professor Catherine Lu about their decision to wear the veil.

Quebec teenagers explain why they choose to wear the Muslim headscarf despite resistance from the school system and sometimes their own families.

With hearings on the secular charter due to begin Tuesday morning at the national assembly, many Quebecers are wearing overt religious symbols today as a form of protest.

A Montreal woman said she wants charges pressed against a public transit worker who she says assaulted her and ordered her to 'go back to your country,' after a disagreement over a faulty automatic metro fare machine. Mina Barak, 23, said she arrived at de la Savane metro station to go to work as usual on Monday morning.

MONTREAL -- The choices for Quebec's observant religious minorities now seem to boil down to fight or flight with the release of details of Quebec's proposed charter of values. It bans religious symbols from the public service and would forbid employees from wearing such garments as the hijab, turban and kippa.

Experiences of Discrimination in Quebec. 56 likes. All nationalities are welcome to share their experiences of discrimination in the language of their choice. Everyone deserves the right to be free of discrimination, and fear of being who they are in the place they call home. Please refrain from posting hateful or profane material.

The Quebec government has ordered the owner of a store in Chelsea, Que., to change the language of her store's Facebook page to French. Eva Cooper owns the women's clothing boutique store, Delilah {in the Parc}, with locations in Ottawa's Glebe neighbourhood, as well as in Chelsea, just north of Gatineau.

Voice of English Discrimination in Quebec. 64 likes. Help stop discrimination in Quebec by telling us your stories so that we can share them and make a difference.

The Quebec government has ordered the owner of a store in Chelsea, Que., to change the language of her store's Facebook page to French. Eva Cooper owns the women's clothing boutique store, Delilah {in the Parc}, with locations in Ottawa's Glebe neighbourhood, as well as in Chelsea, just north of Gatineau.

