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The primary Islamic
objective underpinning hijab is to secure
protection for
women. | Having
lived in Manchester all my life, I have had the
privilege of encountering a wide diversity of
people of varying cultures and traditions, all
coexisting together in this highly cosmopolitan
part of the UK. This rainbow city now hosts a
population of approximately 100,000 Muslims who,
within and among themselves, form a huge melting
pot of cultures, traditional practices, and
languages.
Many would say, however, that
traditional practices are on the decline in the
Muslim community here in the West, and that the
culture practiced by those Muslims who first
immigrated to Western countries no longer
assumes the same importance for their children's
generation. This, I would say is true to a large
extent; much of Eastern culture has been
rendered irrelevant for many Muslims born and
bred in the West. But, on the flip side of
things, this younger generation of Muslims have
also not only taken on more fervently, but
additionally found new meaning in, some of the
cultural practices passed down by their
parents.
Degradation of
Women
One of these practices is that
of dressing modestly, assumed in the form of
hijab, by
which I mean the covering of the whole body,
including the hair and excepting the hands and
face. More and more young Muslim women choose to
wear hijab, not now as a cultural gesture, but
as a marker of their Islamic faith and their
conviction that it is through modest dress alone
that women are truly freed from exploitation by
and enslavement to
men.
It is a refusal to be held
victim by the claw-like clutches of a fashion
industry that preys on
millions of emotionally insecure women who
succumb to its lures. They enslave themselves to
the impossible and ever-changing standards of
physical beauty that fashion dictates. This
industry is much to blame for the soaring rates
of eating disorders among young women such as
bulimia and anorexia and not to mention the
increasing rates of suicide
(Cole).
The enormous pressure placed
on women to be as sexually attractive to men as
possible starts at an early age, as Naheed
Mustafe, a Canadian former feminist who
converted to Islam, states: "[Non-Muslim] women
are taught from early childhood that their worth
is proportional to their attractiveness" (Cole).
As a result, women feel the need to dress in a
way that is sexually pleasing to as many men as
possible — imagine the
headache.
But more significantly, think
about the social consequences. First, in such a
society every attractively dressed woman is a
potential rival for another, which makes for a
stiflingly over-competitive environment
(Emerick). Rather than aiming to improve herself
as a person, a woman makes it her main
preoccupation to out-compete other women, even
if this means having to "win over" another
woman's man to prove her "superiority.". All
this while the man sits back and files his
nails, happy and contented to know there are
women out there fighting for him. Second, in
societies where women are viewed as sexual
objects, the rate of violence towards women is
horrendous. In the United States, figures show
that one out of every four women will be
sexually assaulted at some time of her life
(Cole).
protection for
women
Hijab'sobject is to liberate
women by making them true equals with
men. | Islam puts a stop to this
degradation of women. It teaches women to cover
up their beauty and thus, as Mustafe writes,
gives "back to women the ultimate control over
their bodies" (Cole). It teaches girls from a
young age that what is of utmost importance, for
both men and women, and what truly makes their
worth is their character, their piety, and their
dignity; in this way, both men and women are
rendered equals. Since the Muslim woman is
invisible behind the hijab, those she interacts
with are compelled to appreciate her primarily
for her intellectual abilities and personality,
(Cole) serving to detract attention away from
superficialities such as physical appearance and
image, and thus making for a more genuine
society in which all are judged for whom they
are, and not what material things they
possess.
The primary Islamic objective
underpinning hijab then, is to secure protection
for women, as it says in the
Qur'an:
[O
Prophet! Tell thy wives and thy daughters and
the women of the believers to draw their cloaks
close
round them (when they go abroad). That will be
better, so that they may be recognized
and not annoyed]
(Al-Ahzab
33:59)
The hijab is not — as is
purported by many Western feminists,
orientalists, and not least by the Western media
— prescribed in order to oppress women and to
aid men in maintaining control over them.
Indeed, as seen above, its objective is quite
the opposite: It is to liberate women by making
them true equals with
men.
Negative
Associations
Having said this, however, I
would be careful not to blame Western ignorance
or prejudice entirely for the boundless,
negative associations with oppression the hijab
has borne. It is true that in some ,if not most,
parts of the Muslim world where hijab is
practiced, women do not enjoy their full Islamic
rights, or rights that the West would consider
quite basic, such as the right to vote. Women
are rendered second to men through a cultural
understanding of their role and status in
society. In such parts of the world, the Islamic
objectives underpinning hijab may be overridden
by cultural ones and, thus, hijab may indeed
come to symbolize a man's control over his wife,
sisters, and
daughters.
Taken from this angle, it is
not difficult to see why so many Western
feminists or indeed Muslim feminists regard the
hijab scornfully, an enemy to the cause of
women's liberation rather than its champion. In
this context, we can view the hijab as a
cultural thing and as a practice divorced from
its original Islamic aims and objectives. It now
takes on a culturally molded meaning and,
therefore, sits quite comfortably with other
practices that serve to suppress women, a lack
of access to education being an example of one.
Note, however, that even in the cultural
context, hijab itself is not the tool that
oppresses; it is those other practices used in
conjunction with it that do. Hijab merely takes
on the negative associations but in itself does
little harm.
Such negative associations are
now changing in the West with the new wave of
Muslim youth who want a return, not to culture
or traditional practices, but to real religion
and to a purer Islam — one that is free of
cultural distortions. Hijab in such a context is
primarily a religious thing, and the objectives
underpinning its practice are primarily Islamic
ones.
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Hijab can be either a
religious or a cultural thing, or even both at
the same time. | Religious or Cultural?
I say primarily religious
because I do believe that even in this context,
hijab still bears cultural associations.
However, the culture I talk of now is not that
of Eastern tradition but of a new and different
one, specific to Muslims living in the West. As
one commentator, Andrew Calcutt, bluntly puts
it, "The streets of East London now resound with
two fashion statements: the hood and hijab."
Calcutt makes the suggestion that "religious
tradition is the new rock'n'roll, while in the
current context religious clothing is a kind of
(anti-)
fashion."
Although I do not entirely
agree with Calcutt's philosophy of religion,
which states that religion is merely continuous
re-invention in response to specific historical
contexts rather than the embodiment of timeless
divinity (I do not see why it cannot be both
simultaneously; the two are not mutually
exclusive), I do agree with his analysis of
specific religious practices. He states that
hijab can properly be seen as an aspect of youth
culture, characterized by rebellion against
branded clothes and the fashion industry and,
though it seems paradoxical, by assertion of
one's identity through the anonymity of the
individual behind the hijab. The
difference between this newer culture and the
traditional one associated with hijab is that
this one falls in line with Islamic objectives
while the latter oversteps them. Thus, Islam and
culture are not necessarily diametrically
opposed, but only become so when their
objectives are.
It is clear, then, that hijab
can be either a religious or a cultural thing,
or even both at the same time, depending on the
context of the society it is practiced in. For
this reason, we must be careful to differentiate
between the Islamic and the cultural objectives
that underpin the practice. While the objectives
of the former are to free, liberate, and protect
women, those of the latter can vary. When
cultural objectives fall outside the remit of
Islam — as they may do
in situations where women are made subordinates
to men —, then the practice can no longer be
said to be a religious thing, but really only a
cultural
thing.
Sources:
Calcutt, Andrew. "Hijab in the Hood: Religion, Pop
Culture and Public Policy." University of East London, Rising
East Online. May 2006. Last accessed 20 Nov.
2006.
Cole, Samuel. "Donning the Hijab: (How Not to Be
a Sex Object)." The Prism. March 1998. Last
accessed 20 Nov. 2006.
Emerick, Yahya. "The War of Women."
Islam for Today. Last
accessed 20 Nov. 2006.
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