Security guard accuses supervisors of crossing 'a racial line' with talk about his hair
Ainab Abdullahi's lack of a blazer was the problem, not his hair, GardaWorld says
Does the security guard in the headline photo look "unprofessional" to you?
Some of Ainab Abdullahi's GardaWorld colleagues thought his hairstyle wasn't the right look for his job at a building in Toronto's financial district last month.
After going through what he considers a humiliating and racially-charged conversation that day about his natural hair, he says his employer needs anti-bias training, similar to what Starbucks had last month, and says he will be filing a human rights complaint.
It is a racial line because as people of African descent, we have a certain texture to our hair and it's something I cannot personally control.- Ainab Abdullahi, security guard for GardaWorld
The 21 year-old has worked for GardaWorld for more than three years and says his hair hasn't been an issue, until now.
He has it cut once every two weeks, he says, running his fingers through the longer, naturally curly part on top of his head.
That part he keeps slicked back in a tight bun.
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Two weeks ago, before his 6 a.m. shift, he wore his hair in his usual style, which is in compliance with GardaWorld's uniform policy.
He said the shift turned sour as soon as he walked into the Scotia Plaza building downtown to meet with his GardaWorld team.
"They did, like, a dirty stare," he said.
Two GardaWorld employees, the night supervisor and the site supervisor, and eventually another guard joined in to talk about what to do about his hair, recalled Abdullahi.
One wanted to see his hair down.
"I was like, 'Well, you're going to see my curls, then, and if you don't like this, you're going to hate that," he said.
As he predicted, after Abullahi took his hair down, they asked him to tie it back up.
'Try to get shorter hair,' guard heard saying on audio recording
Abdullahi was then tasked with checking permits in the building's parking garage, which gave him time to reflect on the conversation.
The more he thought about it, the more he felt it was racist.
"It is a racial line because of people of African descent, we have a certain texture to our hair and it's something I cannot personally control," he said.
"To conform to your standards [requires] me, what, shaving it off completely?"
About an hour and a half later, he was called in for a second meeting with the other security guards.
He recorded it on his phone and provided the audio to CBC Toronto.
"This is my hair so, not sure what I can do," Abdullahi tells them on the audio.
He said they were discussing the possibility of sending him home or to work at a different building.
"Try to get shorter hair," one of his colleagues says on the recording.
Abdullahi alleges he was then sent to work in an area of the building where he wouldn't be seen by the public as much.
It was about the blazer, not the hair, GardaWorld says
CBC Toronto sent photos of Abdullahi's hair that day to a representative at GardaWorld and they confirmed that his bun was within their standards.
"Mr. Abdullahi's hairstyle in the photos is compliant with GardaWorld's policy," wrote spokesperson Isabelle Panelli.
She said the problem that day was that Abdullahi was supposed to be wearing a blazer to work at Scotia Plaza.
"He was relocated to an area on the site where the blazer is not mandatory."
But Abdullahi showed CBC Toronto the email he was sent from GardaWorld's scheduling department confirming his shift and the only instruction was to "wear a proper uniform with black shoes."
Usually, he says, when a blazer is required, it says so in the shift email.
Panelli went on to tout the diversity among the company's staff.
GardaWorld employees at the Scotiabank Plaza site are an excellent example of our worldwide workforce diversity.- Isabelle Panelli, GardaWorld spokesperson
"GardaWorld employees at the Scotiabank Plaza site are an excellent example of our worldwide workforce diversity," she wrote in the emailed statement.
She ended the statement saying the firm will investigate the matter.
But that doesn't satisfy Abdullahi.
"I'm going to twist their arm to get an honest response," he said.