Introduction
Sri Lanka’s government education system includes a category of schools with a predominantly Muslim student body — institutions that serve the community’s secular education needs while maintaining a Muslim identity through their student composition, some Islamic content, and community governance structures. These Muslim government schools are distinct from Arabic Colleges and Quran madrasas — they are not Islamic educational institutions in the traditional sense — but they play an important role in Muslim community education and identity.
The two most prominent examples — Zahira College and Hameed Al Husseinie College, both in Colombo — are among Sri Lanka’s most well-known schools of any type, with long histories and strong alumni networks that have shaped Muslim professional and public life in Sri Lanka for generations.
Muslim Schools in Sri Lanka’s Government Education System
Sri Lanka’s government school system categorises schools in various ways — by type (national, provincial), by medium (Sinhala, Tamil, English), and informally by the community they predominantly serve. Schools with a predominantly Muslim student body have evolved over time as community schools — established by Muslim communities and later nationalised, or established by government in areas with large Muslim populations.
| Feature | Details |
| Governance | Ministry of Education (national); Provincial education departments (provincial) |
| Curriculum | Standard government curriculum — GCE O/L and A/L |
| Islamic content | Islamic Studies as a subject option; some Islamic practices in school calendar |
| Language | Tamil medium (most Muslim schools); some English medium |
| Fee structure | Government schools — free |
| Admission | Based on standard government school admission criteria |
These schools are not madrasas. They follow the standard government curriculum and produce GCE Ordinary Level (O/L) and Advanced Level (A/L) qualifications — Sri Lanka’s main secondary and higher secondary examinations. The “Muslim” identity is a matter of community composition, history, and some additional Islamic practices rather than a distinctly Islamic curriculum.
Zahira College, Colombo
Zahira College is Sri Lanka’s most prominent Muslim school and one of the country’s best-known schools of any type. Founded in 1892, it is a government national school in Colombo with a long history of academic achievement and a distinguished alumni network spanning Sri Lankan professional, political, and public life.
| Feature | Details |
| Founded | 1892 |
| Type | Government national school |
| Location | Colombo 10 |
| Medium | Tamil and English |
| Academic record | Consistently strong — produces graduates to top universities |
| Islamic identity | Muslim majority student body; Islamic Studies offered; Islamic calendar observed |
| Alumni | Politicians, professionals, academics, public figures across Sri Lanka |
Zahira is not an Islamic school in the sense of following an Islamic curriculum — it follows the standard government curriculum. Its Muslim identity is expressed through its student composition, Islamic Studies as a subject, observance of Islamic religious occasions, and the cultural environment shaped by a Muslim-majority community.
Zahira’s academic reputation makes it a first-choice destination for Muslim families in Colombo who want strong secular education within a Muslim community environment.
Hameed Al Husseinie College, Colombo
Hameed Al Husseinie College (also known as Hussainiya College) is another historically significant Muslim school in Colombo, with deep roots in the Sri Lankan Muslim community, particularly the Moor community with historical connections to Arab trading heritage.
| Feature | Details |
| Historical significance | Deep roots in the Colombo Moor community |
| Type | Government school |
| Location | Colombo |
| Identity | Muslim community school with strong historical identity |
| Curriculum | Standard government curriculum |
Like Zahira, Hameed Al Husseinie serves the secular education needs of Muslim families while maintaining a Muslim community environment and identity.
Other Significant Muslim Government Schools
Beyond the two flagship Colombo institutions, Sri Lanka has numerous other government schools with predominantly Muslim student populations:
| School / Type | Region | Notes |
| Muslim schools in Ampara district | Eastern Province | Large Muslim population; multiple significant Muslim schools |
| Muslim schools in Batticaloa | Eastern Province | Tamil-medium; significant Muslim community schools |
| Muslim schools in Trincomalee | Eastern Province | Mixed Muslim and Tamil communities |
| Muslim schools in Kandy | Central Province | Muslim community schools in the hill country |
| Muslim schools in Mannar | Northern Province | Muslim community affected by civil conflict; rebuilding |
The Eastern Province has the largest concentration of Muslim government schools outside Colombo, reflecting the large Muslim population in the Ampara, Batticaloa, and Trincomalee districts.
Islamic Content in Government School Curricula
Sri Lanka’s government curriculum includes Islamic Studies as a subject option — available to Muslim students as one of their subject choices at O/L and A/L level. This is not specific to Muslim schools but is available across the government system wherever Muslim students are enrolled.
| Feature | Details |
| Subject name | Islamic Studies (O/L and A/L) |
| Availability | Government schools with Muslim students — not exclusively Muslim schools |
| Content | Quran, Hadith, fiqh basics, Islamic history, Islamic ethics |
| Examination | GCE O/L and A/L examinations include Islamic Studies |
| Medium | Tamil (for Tamil-medium Muslim students) |
Islamic Studies in government schools is supplementary — covering the same content that Quran madrasas cover in more depth, at a lower intensity. Most Muslim families who want their children to have substantive Islamic education supplement government school Islamic Studies with attendance at a Quran madrasa or Arabic College.
The Muslim Schools vs Arabic College Question
Sri Lankan Muslim families often navigate a choice between two educational pathways:
| Pathway | Institutions | Outcome |
| Government Muslim school | Zahira, provincial Muslim schools | GCE O/L and A/L; university access; mainstream employment |
| Arabic College | DMRCA-registered Arabic Colleges | Islamic scholarship qualifications; Islamic career pathways |
Many families pursue both — sending children to government Muslim schools for secular education while simultaneously enrolling them in Quran madrasas for Islamic education. This dual-track approach is the most common pattern in Sri Lanka’s Muslim community.
The question of which pathway receives greater family investment varies by community, socioeconomic position, and aspiration. Urban, professional Muslim families typically prioritise government school academic achievement; communities with stronger religious tradition may prioritise Arabic College education.
Muslim School Governance and Community Involvement
Government schools — including Muslim schools — are governed by the Ministry of Education and Provincial Education Departments. However, Muslim schools maintain strong community connections through:
Old Boys’ Associations: Institutions like Zahira have active and financially significant alumni associations that contribute to school development — funding facilities, scholarships, and equipment.
Mosque and community networks: Muslim schools draw student bodies from the surrounding Muslim community and maintain relationships with local mosques and Islamic organisations.
Board of Directors/School Development Societies: Government school governance structures include parent and community representatives, giving the Muslim community a voice in school management within the government framework.
Challenges Facing Muslim Government Schools
Resource disparities. Muslim government schools in the Eastern Province and other less-developed areas face significant resource constraints compared to Colombo national schools like Zahira — in facilities, teacher quality, and educational outcomes.
Post-conflict reconstruction. Schools in the Northern and Eastern Provinces were significantly damaged during Sri Lanka’s civil conflict (1983–2009) and have faced ongoing challenges in reconstruction and quality improvement.
Post-2019 environment. The Easter Sunday attacks created an environment of increased scrutiny of Muslim institutions, including government schools. Muslim students and families reported experiencing increased discrimination and social tension in the post-2019 period.
Curriculum Islamic content. Islamic Studies as a government curriculum subject is regarded by many Muslim educators as insufficient — too brief and shallow to provide substantive Islamic formation. This drives continued demand for Quran madrasas and Arabic Colleges as supplements.
Teacher Islamic qualifications. Government Muslim schools need Islamic Studies teachers with both government teaching qualifications and Islamic education knowledge — a combination that is not always easy to find.
Conclusion
Sri Lanka’s Muslim government schools — from the prestigious Zahira College in Colombo to hundreds of provincial schools across the Eastern Province — provide secular education within a Muslim community environment, producing GCE O/L and A/L graduates who go on to universities and professional careers. They are not Islamic educational institutions in the traditional sense, but they are important pillars of the Muslim community’s educational landscape and symbols of Muslim civic participation in Sri Lankan life.
Most Muslim families combine government Muslim school attendance with Quran madrasa education — a dual-track approach that serves both secular academic and Islamic educational needs. For administrators of both types of institutions, digital management tools improve operational efficiency and governance quality.
Ilmify supports Sri Lankan Islamic educational institutions — Arabic Colleges and Quran madrasas — with student management, attendance, fees, and parent communication built for the Islamic education context. Explore Ilmify →


