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		Illinois college moves to fire professor 
		who said Muslims, Christians worship same God 
		
		 
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		[January 06, 2016] 
		 (Reuters) - Wheaton College, an evangelical Christian university 
		outside of Chicago, said on Tuesday it was taking steps to fire a 
		tenured political science professor after she wrote in a Facebook post 
		that Muslims and Christians worship the same God. 
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			 Dr. Larycia Hawkins wrote on the social media site on Dec. 10 that 
			she was donning the hijab head scarf during the period of advent 
			before Christmas as a sign of solidarity with Muslims. In her post 
			she said "we worship the same God." 
			 
			Hawkins was placed on administrative leave after the comment drew 
			criticism, and on Tuesday the school said in a statement Wheaton's 
			provost had delivered a notice to President Philip Ryken 
			recommending her employment be terminated. 
			 
			"This Notice follows the impasse reached by the parties," the 
			statement said. "Dr. Hawkins declined to participate in further 
			dialogue about the theological implications of her public 
			statements," it said. 
			  
			  
			 
			The school has said that Hawkins was not placed on leave because she 
			wore a hijab, but because her "theological statements seem 
			inconsistent with Wheaton College’s doctrinal convictions." 
			 
			After a hearing with a faculty committee and other reviews, The 
			Wheaton College Board of Trustees will make a final decision 
			regarding Hawkins' employment. 
			 
			Hawkins could not immediately be reached for comment about the 
			notice to recommend her termination. 
			 
			On her website, Hawkins said she received an emailed notification on 
			Jan. 4 that her employment was up for review and she planned to 
			address the issue at a Chicago-area church on Wednesday. 
			 
			"Dr. Hawkins maintains Christian support for the Muslim community 
			amidst the ongoing anti-Muslim climate," the site said. 
			 
			
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			On her Facebook page on Dec. 10, Hawkins said she would wear the 
			hijab in solidarity with Muslim neighbors. "I stand in religious 
			solidarity with Muslims because they, like me, a Christian, are 
			people of the book." 
			 
			The solidarity gesture comes as Muslims around the United States 
			report worries of a backlash and growing Islamophobia after a couple 
			who had pledged allegiance to the extremist group Islamic State 
			killed 14 people in California in early December. 
			 
			Hawkins, who has written on race, religion and American politics, 
			said she had consulted with the local chapter of the Council on 
			American Islamic Relations, an advocacy group, to make sure that it 
			would not be seen as offensive for a non-Muslim woman to wear the 
			headscarf. 
			 
			(Reporting by Victoria Cavaliere in Los Angeles) 
			
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			reserved.] 
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