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School, parents at war over Cook Island boy’s manbun

Cheryl GoodenoughAAP
Cyrus Taniela has been told to cut his hair by his school.
Camera IconCyrus Taniela has been told to cut his hair by his school. Credit: Facebook/Solialofi Filipo Taniela

A private school principal is adamant a five-year-old Cook Island boy cannot have long hair, even if it is part of his culture.

A Queensland family says they were told Cyrus Taniela had to abide by school rules and cut his hair during his first week of prep.

The family has been planning a traditional haircutting ceremony on the boy’s seventh birthday for years.

In Cook Island culture, cutting a boy’s hair for the first time is a rite of passage, although there is no set age for the ceremony.

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Australian Christian College Moreton said principal Gary Underwood has spent time in the Cook Islands and “is an enthusiastic supporter of Islander people and their customs.”

In a statement on its Facebook page, the school also said “Respecting the College’s policies, procedures and guidelines allows the College to be consistent across its many cultural groups.”

Cyrus Taniela
Camera IconCyrus Taniela Credit: Facebook

Mr Underwood said all students have to follow school policy, which requires that all boys’ hair is neat, tidy and not hanging over their faces.

“Extreme styles” such as ponytails and buns, like Cyrus wears, are not permitted.

The decision could open the school up to a complaint to the Queensland Human Rights Commission.

A complaint is something Cook Islands Council of Queensland president Archie Atiau says he would support.

Mr Atiau says he is also concerned about the boy’s mental health.

“Not only now, but the long-term effects if he gets to adulthood and realises that he didn’t get the opportunity (to have the ceremony),” Mr Atiau said.

“The family should make the decision as to when his hair is cut.”

Cyrus’ mother Wendy says the family has been planning a traditional haircutting ceremony on the boy’s seventh birthday for years.

She said it would be a big cost to bring forward the ceremony planned to be held in Sydney and attended by more than 100 family members.

“(The principal) said, can’t you just bring the ceremony forward?” Ms Taniela told the Cook Islands News.

“But this is a big cost, and we have other family commitments. We don’t all drive BMWs.”

Cyrus’s father Jason wanted to continue the haircutting tradition because it meant so much to him, Ms Taniela told the news outlet.

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