The
hijab, the head cover Muslim women wear in keeping with their religious
traditions, has become in modern times a politically charged issue in several
Muslim countries, and more recently in Europe.
In
the early eighties, Iran imposed the hijab on its female citizens, while Syria
banned it from schools during the same period. Syria gradually came to terms
with the hijab, as the number of Syrian women who chose to wear it increased
drastically during the nineties.
The
hijab is enforced today in Iran and Saudi Arabia, and banned in Tunisia and
Turkey. France banned the hijab in 2004, and far right politicians and pundits
are calling for similar bans in other European countries, and have already
succeeded in doing so in the Belgian city of Antwerp.
The
Turkish parliament passed last week a constitutional amendment that practically
repealed early constitutional provisions that allowed the Turkish government to
ban, in the late '90s, the hijab from government buildings, universities, and
schools. Although the lifting of the ban is not in force yet, the confrontation
over this issue with secularists who control the military and the courts has
already started. Secularist Turks are up in arms, protesting the new amendment,
and preparing to challenge it in court.
The
debate over the hijab is emotionally charged, with secular Turks presenting the
move as the first step toward ending democracy in Turkey and forcing all
Turkish women to wear headscarves. This alarmist language has clouded the
debate and created a sense of panic, as the choices presented are based on the
logic of either/or, as if the only choices society can make is that between
banning or enforcing the hijab. These are of course false choices, as society
can choose neither to ban nor enforce. The third choice is the one available to
women in most Muslim countries. In most societies, the decision to wear a
headscarf, or to take it off, is a personal choice.
Yet,
the real problem is not in the decision a woman makes, but in the
politicization of that decision. The problem lies in the moral inconsistency
and the use of double standards in addressing an issue concerning individual
choice and freedom of expression. The only morally defensible position is
denying the state the right to either force or prohibit people to follow
practices they genuinely believe to be required by their religious traditions,
particularly when these practices do not violate the rights of others.
The
argument to ban the hijab often rests on a paternalistic attitude derived from
the dominant position enjoyed by the group to which the person who advocate the
hijab ban belongs. For decades now, anti-hijab writers refused to consider it
as a personal choice and an individual right, protected under international
humanitarian law. Reza Afshari, for instance, insists that wearing a hijab must
not be seen as a self-expression of Muslim women, but rather as a symptom of a
male-dominated culture. He, further, argues that Muslim women have internalized
the "male-dominated culture." He even claims that, in addition to
being sub-consciously misguided, Muslim women have another reason for wearing a
hijab, namely to avoid "those sanctioned practices that permit harassment
of women in public, forcing them to comply with repressive norms and rewarding
them by according them a marked difference in the ways men treat women in public."
The
argument is both flawed and sexist. It is flawed because it can be equally used
to undermine the right of women who chose not to wear a hijab by those who
could argue that the latter style of dressing is not a personal choice, but is
rather influenced by the dominant culture. The argument is, more importantly,
sexist as it assumes that women cannot have a mind of their own, and are always
vulnerable to manipulation by male members of their society.
Even
if we grant, for the sake of argument, that the above assertion is correct,
then the remedy cannot be a decision to ban the hijah and deny women the right
to personal choices, in violation of equal protection of the law. The remedy
must rely on persuasion, education, and enactment of laws that would empower
women to act on their on volition, instead of being forced by the state to wear
the headscarf of take it off.
A
similar argument was recently made by Cheryl
Benard in a report that was published by the RAND Corporation in
2004. Benard refused to see the Muslim headscarf as a religious practice, and
chose instead to castigate it as a provocative political statement and a
challenge to Western democracy. Benard insisted that the hijab is worn by women
who belong to one of several problematic categories. "In the United
States," she claimed, "hijab is typically worn by the following
groups: recent immigrants from rural, traditional parts of the Muslim world;
fundamentalists; unassimilated traditionalists belonging to the strongly
observant minority; the elderly;" and, the author states that when it is
worn by "young women," these women "want to get attention and
make a provocative statement in their schools, colleges, or workplaces."
What
is provocative is not that Muslim women are choosing to wear a hijab, but that
there are still individuals that lay claim to intellectualism who, in keeping
with orientalist strategies, continue to deal with the followers of the Islamic
faith as silent objects of research who must always be defined by their
detractors, but never allowed to define themselves in their own voices. This
sad state of affairs was highlighted in an article by Manal Omar that was
published in the Guardian in April 2007 under the title “I felt more
welcome in the Bible belt.”
Manal
narrates in the article her ordeal during a short stay in Oxford, England, when
she was challenged by an angry man who did not approve of her wearing a
swimsuit that covered her body. Not only did the man speak with her in a
condescending tone, but the newspaper that reported the event with sensational
and negative spin refused to interview her, and relied solely on the account of
her accuser.
She
eloquently described her painful experience as she was rendered an object of
ridicule, and her story was utilized as a springboard for attacks on
multiculturalism and immigrant Muslims in an online discussion forum.
"Looking back," she wrote, "what disturbed me the most about the
debate was that my very identity was reduced to a cluster of cliches about
Muslim women. I was painted in broad strokes as an oppressed, unstable Muslim
woman. I was made invisible, an object of ridicule and debate, with no opinion
or independent thoughts. The fact that I had dedicated the past 10 years to
working on women's issues on a global level, led a delegation of American women
into Afghanistan in 2003, and put my life on the line in Iraq struggling for
women's constitutional rights were clearly beyond anyone's imagination."
Politicians
and pundits who question the right of Muslim women to practice their faith do
not only ignore the leadership role they play, but also fail to recognize their
capacity to be inspired by their faith. The claim that the hijab is worn today
by oppressed women is seriously flawed, and is remnant of 19th century
orientalism. Many women who chose the hijab today are highly educated and
actively involved in public life. They include lawyers, journalists,
politicians, directors of non-profit organizations, human rights advocates,
professors, and leaders of religious groups and grassroots organizations.
It
is about time that Muslim women's personal choices are respected and their
voices are heard.
Dr.
Louay Safi serves as the executive director of ISNA Leadership Development
Center, an Indiana based organization dedicated to enhancing leadership
qualities and skills. He writes and lectures on issues relating to Islam and
the West,, democracy, human rights, leadership, and world peace. His
commentaries are available at: http://blog.lsinsight.org.