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LRPV
11-20-2006, 11:38 PM
http://www.naharnet.com/domino/tn/Newsdesk.nsf/naharnetminimal.gif (http://web.naharnet.com/default.asp)

Hijab: a Religious Tradition and Fashion Accessory

http://www.naharnet.com/domino/tn/Newsdesk.nsf/0/7df13d89440914b4c22572270030f68b/Body/0.82?OpenElement&FieldElemFormat=jpgShereen Ali is beautiful, young and outgoing. She loves hanging out at Beirut's hip cafes and, like other women in her crowd, is a stickler for the latest fashions.
What sets the first-year medical student apart from her girlfriends is her hijab, the headscarf she always wears -- and is careful to match with whatever tight ankle-length skirt and fitted, long-sleeved blouse she has picked out that day.
"Every morning I wake up, I am aware of my hijab identity," says Shereen, 21. "I have to be, because it determines the way I behave toward people and them toward me.
"I always feel I have to prove to them that my wearing the hijab doesn't mean that I am a fanatic, close-minded or backward or even an extremist, but that I'm very much like them."
Shereen is not alone in Lebanon's diversified society of Muslims and Christians where it is not uncommon to see women dressed in black with a headscarf walking hand-in-hand with girlfriends -- or even sisters and relatives -- whose hair flows freely and who wear skimpier outfits.
And it's also not uncommon to see young "hijabed" women wearing makeup, parading along the streets. For Lebanon's Shiite and Sunni women, dress ranges from traditional black, to the fashionable, colorful scarf tied under the chin, with the face showing, to the typically Western short skirts or slacks favored by Lebanese Christians.
Although many Muslim women wear the hijab because of tradition or because they're pressured by families or religious figures, many others do so of their own free will, like Sawsan Herbawi, 38, who comes from a family that was not particularly religious.
She hides her long, naturally blond hair under a scarf, exposing only her green eyes and freckled face.
Until six years ago, Sawsan not only was "hysterically against the hijab" -- as she put it -- but preferred clothes that were head-turningly revealing. Suddenly one day, she changed to a black robe and a plain headscarf.
"I don't know why I became hijabed. It was shocking to me because I used to be disgusted by it, I was against the principle of women wearing it.
"Why I chose to wear it, I really don't know, I can't explain. I felt something inside, I don't know what, but the feeling told me that I should wear the hijab," she said.
Her husband was speechless when she told him of her decision, but didn't try to stop her.
She first donned the hijab on a visit to the shrine of a Shiite Muslim woman saint in the Syrian capital of Damascus, hoping the saint, Sayyeda Zainab, would give her the strength to keep the hijab on forever.
"After all, hijab is an obligation for a Muslim woman," Sawsan said as she took a drag from her cigarette.
However, she said wearing the hijab had not changed her.
"I'm the same person inside and outside. I only hide my hair. Now I go to women-only beaches and wear a bathing suit, like I used to. ... But I do not shake hands with men. That's not allowed in our religion," she said.
But she discourages her 11-year-old daughter from wearing the headscarf now. "I don't let her -- not until she grows up and decides whether she really wants it or not," said Sawsan.
The medical student Shereen Ali also tried to discourage her younger sister, Mariam, when she insisted on wearing the hijab at age 12 -- but to no avail. Shereen herself first wore the headscarf at 12 and didn't want Mariam to face the same doubts she later had about the traditional dress.
At their religious school, Shereen and Mariam had been lectured that the hijab was an Islamic obligation, that it would protect them from men's malicious eyes. Their hijab-wearing mother had argued they should not take up the scarf too early, but both went ahead.
"For me it was an adventure and I thought it would make me look older and mature," said Shereen.
Later, she started having regrets about wearing the scarf while still a child but was too embarrassed to take it off, worried what her family and teacher would say. Mariam also had regrets and she, too, was "ashamed" to speak up.
"I was hoping someone, my mother or Shereen, would tell me to take it off. But they didn't," she said. So she kept quiet and by the following year she had become convinced of wearing it.
These days, both Shereen and Mariam, now 18, warn their 12-year-old sister Sara to stay away from the headscarf, despite pressure from her religion teacher. Sara needs little persuading; she loves to put colorful ornaments in her light brown hair and finds the headscarf "boring."
"If I put on the hijab I won't be able to wear earrings," she says. "I like looking pretty." She then adds: "But I know when I grow older -- maybe in a year or two -- I will have to wear it. "My sisters wear it so I will also have to and because our teacher tells us the Quran says it's the duty of the girl to wear it. I will have to. God will punish me if I don't."(AP) (AP photo shows a veiled woman passing by a boutique in Beirut's southern suburbs)


Beirut, Updated 17 Nov 06, 13:46

Sad, God will punish her if she does not wear a scarf?:-(

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Mr.K
11-21-2006, 12:26 AM
who cares it's not your daughter.

vinny_121_ND
11-21-2006, 12:36 AM
The quran doesn't explicity say that u MUST wear the veil. It says that u should dress modestly, ie, not some bikini.

Of course, there are people who take it to an extreme, rather safe than sorry. u know?

V

Ordie
11-21-2006, 12:49 AM
A few weeks ago a Mother of six was brutally killed in Fremont, California. She was wearing a Hijab and many here think it was a hate crime. Many non Muslims including Jews, Christians, Sikhs and others attended the event to show solidarity with the Afghan community.


In solidarity, many wear head covering

By Lisa Fernandez
San Jose Mercury News

Samantha Keller of San Jose wrapped a pink scarf around her face Monday, covering her long, curly brown hair. The church-going Catholic donned a Muslim veil as part of a global social experiment to show that she respects other people's cultures and faiths.
``I didn't get any weird stares or feel ostracized,'' said Samantha, 15, a sophomore at San Jose's Presentation High School. ``My school is pretty tolerant, but I wonder how it would have been in the real world?''
She was among the few who took ``Wear a Hijab/Turban Day'' to heart.
The event officially kicked off at noon Monday when about 100 people attended a 30-minute ceremony in rainy, blustery weather in Fremont's Central Park. Most of the guests covered their heads for the gathering but took off their headgear afterward. Keller kept her scarf on all day.
``The motto at my school is, `Not words but actions,' '' Keller said. ``I thought this was my chance to do something.''
The event was dreamed up by a handful of Fremont community activists in response to the Oct. 19 slaying of Alia Ansari, 38, an Afghan mother of six who wore a hijab the day she was killed. Muslim women cover their hair to show modesty.
Because Ansari had no known enemies, many perceive the brazen daytime shooting as a hate crime. Hijab-day organizers wanted to show Ansari's family, and the wider community, that Fremont is not a hateful place.
With 212,000 residents who hail from 155 countries, the Bay Area's fourth-largest city is among the most diverse of its size in the country. Countless people from London to New York and Saudi Arabia e-mailed the organizers to say they would wear head scarves Monday, too. The event expanded to include Sikh turbans, Jewish yarmulkes and African-American-style head wear.
``This was a horribly sad incident that occurred,'' said Fremont Mayor Bob Wasserman, who chose not to wear a head covering to the event. ``But we wanted to honor the victim and her family and children to show that we share in their pain.''
Police have no suspect or motive for the crime. Police Chief Craig Steckler attended Monday's event, giving out the first public updates about what police are doing to solve the case.
Although police took a 27-year-old Fremont into custody as a ``person of interest'' in the case and arrested him on an unrelated parole violation, he has not been arrested in connection with the killing. Steckler said detectives are still reviewing the man's computer databases and other written materials.
None of Ansari's immediate family members was at Monday's gathering. A week after his wife's death, husband Ahmad and family flew to Afghanistan to live with his relatives.
Not everyone supported ``Wear a Hijab Day.'' Pastor Bruce Green of Fremont, who is paid by 12 churches to build bridges between the Christian and Muslim communities, said he didn't want to ask women to wear veils because some Afghan women feel the veil can represent an oppressive, Taliban-style society.
And some Afghan elders told the Mercury News they didn't like non-Muslims organizing the event. They felt there was too much political grandstanding over a tragedy best left to Afghans.
But the debate did not cloud Monday's event. An Afghan elder, Ustad Shah Mujaddide, led a prayer before the service. Dozens of white doves were released to symbolize freedom and peace.
Organizers said they were pleased with the turnout, noting that guests used their scarves, as well as umbrellas, to shield themselves from the rain.
```This was better than I expected,'' said Melanie Gadener, founder of the Foundation for Self Reliance, a non-profit that helps Afghans, who dressed in a blue-and-gold gown and hijab from Afghanistan. ``The point was just to come together as a community.''
She thought of the idea with Fremont City Councilwoman Anu Natarajan, who asked guests to do more than just wear a scarf.
``Let's get rid of political correctness,'' Natarajan told the crowd. ``Let's get beyond that and ask someone a question about where they're from. Start a positive dialogue. Get to know your neighbor.''
The two were soon embraced by Samina Faheem Sundas of Palo Alto, founder of American Muslim Voice, who asked to join the movement. She passed out 1,000 free scarves from Pakistan. Many of the women, Muslim and not, scrambled to the scarf table, eager to take home a beautiful piece of cloth -- some woven with silver glitter, others dyed deep purple, yellow and red.

LRPV
11-21-2006, 12:56 AM
who cares it's not your daughter.
Not the point. You just stick to reading your collection of Pravda.

Paul in Saudi2
11-21-2006, 06:03 AM
Sorry, I got other fish to fry. Once we get everything else fixed i will worry about dress codes.

LRPV
11-21-2006, 07:34 AM
Sorry, I got other fish to fry. Once we get everything else fixed i will worry about dress codes.

Does your husband know you are on the net?

Lazy Lob
11-21-2006, 07:36 AM
Does your husband know you are on the net?


I'm having a bit of a chortle at that quip.

Invisigoth
11-21-2006, 09:11 AM
it would protect them from men's malicious eyes.

That's the key sentence. I know dozends of girls who wear the hijab, simply to protect themselves as much as possible in a ******ly opressed and partially misogynistic society.

End of story.

LRPV
11-21-2006, 09:24 AM
That's the key sentence. I know dozends of girls who wear the hijab, simply to protect themselves as much as possible in a ******ly opressed and partially misogynistic society.

End of story.




No. It is not the end of the story. That phrase is used by those who cannot validate their arguements.

But then you are Sydney Lebanese? Yes?

khukuri
11-21-2006, 09:30 AM
A big myth that is around is that everyone of theese girls are forced to be wearing one. Alot are but far from everybody.

Matter of fact is, my sister chose to take it off,but not because she didnt really want to,but because it was impossible to function in western soceity with one. Not because the hijab itself, but because eveyrone was looking at her like a fvcking brainless moron, from her teachers to the possible employer. Some hijab wearers are opressed by theyre families BUT ALL OF THEM are opressed by western soceity, the same people who despise hijab because it is an opressive symbol treates hijab wearers (the supposed victims) like ****! oh the irony

Invisigoth
11-21-2006, 10:31 AM
No. It is not the end of the story. That phrase is used by those who cannot validate their arguements.

But then you are Sydney Lebanese? Yes?

Well thank you for your insight. What's your point? Do you live in an Islamic country? Didn't think so.

Durandal
11-21-2006, 10:58 AM
LRPV, are you going to determine what is primitive and what is not?

You going to tell the Mennonites that?

What about Quakers or the Amish?

Sort of like the argument: "There are no need for guns in a free society in the modern day world, they are relics of the past.

americanbychoice
11-21-2006, 11:09 AM
A big myth that is around is that everyone of theese girls are forced to be wearing one. Alot are but far from everybody.

Matter of fact is, my sister chose to take it off,but not because she didnt really want to,but because it was impossible to function in western soceity with one. Not because the hijab itself, but because eveyrone was looking at her like a fvcking brainless moron, from her teachers to the possible employer. Some hijab wearers are opressed by theyre families BUT ALL OF THEM are opressed by western soceity, the same people who despise hijab because it is an opressive symbol treates hijab wearers (the supposed victims) like ****! oh the irony

Try wearing a Crucifix openly, or a Kippot, or some other religious ornamentation of some sort.

It's not just the hijab... it's anyone of any religion that gets odd looks. Hell, just try being of the wrong color (black, white, yellow, whatever) in a place where the person doesn't happen to like your color... it happens.

Oppressed by Western Society? Just because Islam is not the State religion doesn't mean that Islam is under attack... it's just that everything is questioned, even "Chimpy McBush".