THE QUESTION OF HIJAB: SUPPRESSION OR LIBERATION
"Why do Muslim women have to cover their heads?" This question is one which is asked by Muslim and non-Muslim alike. For many women it is the truest test of being a Muslim.
The answer
to the question is very simple - Muslim women observe
HIJAB (covering the head and the body) because Allah has
told them to do so.
Other secondary
reasons include the requirement for modesty in both men
and women. Both will then be evaluated for intelligence
and skills instead of looks and sexuality. An Iranian
school girl is quoted as saying, "We want to stop
men from treating us like sex objects, as they have always
done. We want them to ignore our appearance and to be
attentive to our personalities and mind. We want them
to take us seriously and treat us as equals and not just
chase us around for our bodies and physical looks."
A Muslim
woman who covers her head is making a statement about
her identity. Anyone who sees her will know that she is
a Muslim and has a good moral character. Many Muslim women
who cover are filled with dignity and self esteem; they
are pleased to be identified as a Muslim woman. As a chaste,
modest, pure woman, she does not want her sexuality to
enter into interactions with men in the smallest degree.
A woman who covers herself is concealing her sexuality
but allowing her femininity to be brought out.
The Qur’an
says:
Islam has no fixed standard as to the style of dress or type of clothing that Muslims must wear. However, some requirements must be met. The first of these requirements is the parts of the body which must be covered.
The second
requirement is looseness. The clothing must be loose enough
so as not to describe the shape of the woman’s body. One
desirable way to hide the shape of the body is to wear
a cloak over other clothes. However, if the clothing is
loose enough, an outer garment is not necessary.
Thickness
is the third requirement. The clothing must be thick enough
so as not to show the color of the skin it covers or the
shape of the body.
Another
requirement is an over-all dignified appearance. The clothing
should not attract men’s attention to the woman. It should
not be shiny and flashy so that everyone notices the dress
and the woman.
In addition
there are other requirements:
Often forgotten
is the fact that modern Western dress is a new invention.
Looking at the clothing of women as recently as seventy
years ago, we see clothing similar to hijab. These active
and hard-working women of the West were not inhibited
by their clothing which consisted of long, full dresses
and various types of head covering. Muslim women who wear
hijab do not find it impractical or interfering with their
activities in all levels and walks of life.
Hijab is
not merely a covering dress but more importantly, it is
behavior, manners, speech and appearance in public. Dress
is only one facet of the total being.
The basic
requirement of the Muslim woman’s dress apply to the Muslim
man’s clothing with the difference being manly in degree.
Modesty requires that the area between the navel and the
knee be covered in front of all people except the wife.
The clothing of men should not be like the dress of women,
nor should it be tight or provocative. A Muslim should
dress to show his identity as a Muslim. Men are not allowed
to wear gold or silk. However, both are allowed for women.
For both
men and women, clothing requirements are not meant to
be a restriction but rather a way in which society will
function in a proper, Islamic manner.
Because it gives me freedom.
Women are
taught from early childhood that their worth is proportional
to their attractiveness. We feel compelled to pursue abstract
notions of beauty, half-realizing that such a pursuit
is futile.
When women
reject this form of oppression, they face ridicule and
contempt. Whether it’s women who refuse to wear makeup
or to shave their legs, or to expose their bodies, society,
both men and women, have trouble dealing with them.
In the Western
world, the hijab has come to symbolize either forced silence
or radical, unconscionable militancy. Actually, it’s neither.
It is simply a woman’s assertion that judgment of her
physical person is to play no role whatsoever in social
interaction.
Wearing
the hijab has given me freedom from constant attention
to my physical self. Because my appearance is not subjected
to public scrutiny, my beauty, or perhaps lack of it,
has been removed from the realm of what can legitimately
be discussed.
No one knows
whether my hair looks as if I just stepped out of a salon,
whether or not I can pinch an inch, or even if I have
unsightly stretch marks. And because no one knows, no
one cares.
Feeling
that one has to meet the impossible male standards of
beauty is tiring and often humiliating. I should know,
I spent my entire teenage years trying to do it. It was
a borderline bulimic and spent a lot of money I didn’t
have on potions and lotions in hopes of becoming the next
Cindy Crawford.
The definition
of beauty is ever changing; waifish is good, waifish is
bad, athletic is good -- sorry, athletic is bad. Narrow
hips? Great. Narrow hips? Too bad.
Women are
not going to achieve equality with the right to bear their
breasts in public, as some people would like to have you
believe. That would only make us party to our own objectification.
True equality will be had only when women don’t need to
display themselves to get attention and won’t need to
defend their decision to keep their bodies to themselves
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