The Netherlands votes today in parliamentary elections in which the far-right populist Geert Wilders has already succeeded in bringing his openly anti-Muslim views into the center of public discourse.
In France, still reeling from a slew of terrorist attacks in the past two years perpetrated mostly by Isis (Islamic State) militants or sympathisers with French and European passports, the far-right National Front party is similarly on the rise.
Marine Le Pen, the party's contender for president, is almost certain to qualify for the second and final round of the vote in May.
The particulars of the two cases considered in today's ruling are different. In the absence of official internal regulations prohibiting what employees can wear to work, the court suggested, Muslim women have a stronger case for wearing the hijab to the office.
According to the court, this was true in the French case.
The plaintiff in that case is Asma Bougnaoui, a Muslim woman who worked as an engineer at Micropole, a French IT firm. She had worn the headscarf when she was hired in 2008, but a client subsequently complained to her supervisors, insisting that there be "no veil next time". Bougnaoui refused to take it off and was eventually fired in June 2009.
Because there was no official policy banning the headscarf at Micropole, "the willingness of an employer to take account of the wishes of a customer no longer to have the services of that employer provided by a worker wearing an Islamic headscarf cannot be considered a genuine and determining occupational requirement," the court said.
But the Belgian case presents a different scenario.
In that case, Samira Achiba, a young Muslim woman, was hired in 2003 as a receptionist by G4S, a British multinational security company. Unlike her French counterpart, Achiba had not worn the hijab at the time she was hired and had accepted an offer from a firm with a clear "neutrality" policy.
Only later did she request that she be permitted to wear the headscarf in 2006. Because of the company's policy prohibiting any "political, philosophical or religious signs" from the workplace, Achiba was dismissed.
In a strongly secular Europe home to a growing Muslim minority - especially sizable in France and Belgium - the cases present the oft-contradictory natures of two distinct liberties: the freedom of religion and the freedom of enterprise.
The tension between the two is particularly high in a France on the eve of a historic presidential election in which much of the debate has focused on issues of identity and culture. The place of Islam in French society has become a fixation across the political spectrum.
France is likely home to the largest Muslim population in Europe, and among the most visible traces of that community is the headscarf, seemingly an eternal source of controversy in a nominally secular country committed to banning overt religious signs from public life.