Tag Archives: Ban

remembering my face-veiled mother

12 May

salaam readers! i have a lot of work to do today but i wanted to leave you with this great article from Toronto Muslims by a Pakistani brother about his Niqabi mother. what a great narration of her life and her devotion. inshAllah stories like this one can break down stereotypes and create an more open and nuanced dialogue about Muslim women.

Remembering My Face-veiled Mother

By Abdul Malik Mujahid

In the brouhaha calling for a ban on Niqabs (face veils) in France and in Europe in general, I could not help but remember my own mother, who was a Niqabi (face-veil-wearing woman, to use a recently coined term). She tugs at my memory even now, as she always will, over a quarter century after her death, and just days before Mother’s Day this weekend.

I grew up in rural Pakistan, during the first decades of the country’s establishment in 1947. For me, Niqabis were not a symbol of oppression, backwardness or alarm. Where I lived, both educated and illiterate women wore the face veil. As well, a number of women did not wear the face veil. But it was never an issue for either groups of women, nor for the men of this community. Nobody gave sermons about it, there were no political discussions about it, and it did not represent affiliation to unseemly elements in society.

The Niqab was part of a general understanding of modesty between men and women. And contrary to popular belief, the onus of responsibility for this virtue, highly valued in Islamic culture, was not just on the women. Both sexes were required to observe it.

For example, as a teenager, I regularly walked miles to school on pathways that were as narrow as one foot,  in the midst of vegetable patches, crops of sugar cane and corn, as well as cotton fields. Sometimes, the women working in the fields would pass by in groups. The established etiquette was that if a man saw a group of women coming, he would move aside to let the group of women pass, and vice-versa if there were fewer women and more men passing by.

The women who worked in the fields usually did not cover their faces, but if they saw men approaching on these narrow paths, they would. Then they would remove their face veils. I don’t ever recall our Imam or anyone else lecturing us on this topic or parents telling us what to do. Yet, somehow, everyone knew how to be respectful toward the other gender.

But back to my mother, the first Niqabi I ever knew. She covered her face in public, but never her humanity. Her heart was always open to others and her motto in life was to serve.

I can’t remember a day she did not find some way to serve those in need. Whether it was providing food for the hungry, a shoulder to cry on or just a listening ear, she was a dynamo of service. Even her once large vegetable garden and her love for carpentry, were a means to the end of serving others.

Almost daily, she taught neighborhood girls who were not attending school basic reading and writing, along with how to read the Quran in our yard. And as a multi-tasker, as most moms are, she would usually be doing something on the side, whether it was cooking, sewing or tending to the other mundane tasks involved in keeping house.

Other times, she would speak at women-only gatherings held to honor the memory of Prophet Muhammad, peace and blessings be upon him. Her speeches were about not just loving the Prophet, but putting his life and legacy into action as Muslims. When I was younger, I would tag along, enjoying the food, but also the sight of people dressed in white and being sprinkled with sweet-smelling rosewater.

As a child, I remember her taking me everywhere, including the women-only Meena bazaars. These were the equivalent of the high class benefits we hold today, only a lot simpler. There, like moms today who contribute to school bake sales, she would cook a special dish which was then sold for the good cause of the day. I especially liked her gulgulas and dahi baras.

But cooking, something she did almost daily, did not stop with these fundraisers. I remember her sweltering over a hot stove in 110-degree heat, making food to send to the mosque close to the local train station, where poor travelers and the homeless used to congregate.  I used to think the Imam used to eat all of the food collected from the neighborhood’s women because he was so fat.

It was only when I was older that I discovered that he would serve all of that food spread out on reams of tablecloth in the Masjid. There, these men and women would get some respite from their gnawing hunger and loneliness.

There was no soup kitchen or food pantry. It was the mosque and the Muslim women like my mother running this system who provided for those in need.

Sometimes, random women would appear at our home to talk to my Niqabi mother. Some would cry and my mom would offer a hug of sympathy, a consoling heart and her full attention, no matter how long they needed to unburden themselves of their sadness. As is customary, she would feed them during their visits as well.

I remember one woman who my siblings and I called Khala (maternal aunt). She came from a nearby shanty town. Her husband used to beat her. I remember we children took our revenge and disgust of this abuser by refusing to buy from his shop and never offering our Salaam to him. There were many other unnamed women who we called Khala as well, who came seeking solace from my mother.

My Niqabi mother also attended the local Masjid regularly. This was 50 years ago in a small town in Pakistan. She would not miss Friday and late evening prayers in Ramadan, but would show up many other times as well. I remember all these Niqabis getting together for women-only discussions and classes as well as to hear lectures when a traveling preacher was in town. They would often gather in the mosque to discuss their social work for the community.

Our mosque always had a space for women to pray in. The door of the women’s entrance was at the side where the Imam stood, and the women’s section was on the right side of the Masjid. The men were on the left. Men and women could not see each other but loudspeaker arrangements were made so that everyone could hear. However, at that time it was not a big deal in that small town if a mosque had women’s space or not. Nobody gave sermons about it, wrote about it or made a big deal about the issue either way.

Grocery shopping was another activity my Niqabi mother took me with her to, like countless mothers do today. With her face covered, she moved through the markets, conversing with shopkeepers and negotiating the best price. She knew well who had the best deals, who was honest and who was a cheat.

Interestingly, none of the shopkeepers seemed to have an issue with her Niqab. Like salespersons the world over, they did their best to persuade a potential customer and haggle when necessary. They did not care that she was a woman with her face covered. She was a customer, and they would do whatever they could to ensure she remained one. There were many female grocery store owners in our vegetable market just like in Madinah, the Prophet’s city, where men and women bought and sold in the marketplace.

But my mother’s service and interests were not restricted to education and philanthropy. Politically, she was aware of the trends and issues of the day and she formed her own opinions. In the months before her death, she decided to vote in a national election that my father and the rest of my family were boycotting. After many spirited arguments, on the day of the election, she grabbed her Niqab, Hijab and long robe and went out on her own to find a polling station so she could cast her vote (she had to go to multiple polling stations to finally find her name in that less than organized election or was it a referendum? But that‘s another story).

When she passed away a few weeks later, on a cold day in December 1984, hundreds of people attended the funeral. Somehow, in a place and time where telephones were scarce, they had heard of her death. Many of the attendees were men who had never seen her face. But they knew her through her deeds: the countless meals served; the numerous lessons taught in her yard; the commitment to the hungry and homeless, the poor and needy. Hundreds of people took turns carrying her coffin, as they walked two miles on that frigid evening to bury her in the local cemetery.

My mother was a remarkable and successful woman. She lost a few children and raised others, all while teaching hundreds of girls, feeding the hungry and homeless, remaining aware of the political issues of her day and taking a stand when she had to. If this woman was not successful, I don’t know what success means.

Niqab is a form of dress Muslim women used to choose more often. Some still do while others do not. But whatever their choices, the Niqab issue is about freedom of religion and practicing what you believe in. My mother retained that choice and lived it, all while contributing positively to her society. May Allah bless her and may the reward of anything good I do continue to bless her.

May Allah give courage and patience to all those women who practice the faith the way they want to, not according to the dictates of any husband, father, brother…or government.

Thursday’s Thoughts: Niqabi Ban

17 Dec

Full veil could bar French citizenship

By Elaine Ganley

Associated Press

December 17, 2009

PARIS

– France’s Immigration minister said Wednesday that he wants the wearing of Muslim veils that cover the face and body to be grounds for denying citizenship and long-term residence.

Eric Besson said he planned to take “concrete measures” regarding such veils, which are worn by a small minority of women in France but have become the object of a parliamentary inquiry into whether a ban should be imposed.

Besson spoke during a hearing before the panel of lawmakers as their nearly six-month inquiry draws to a close.

Besson said he believed a formal ban on veils that cover the face and body seemed to him “unavoidable,” with a ban in public services as a minimum step.

Whether such veils are banned or not, he said he intends to personally move forward to ensure that women wearing such veils and seeking French nationality or residence cards are denied.

“I want the wearing of the full veil to be systematically considered as proof of insufficient integration into French society, creating an obstacle to gaining (French) nationality,” he said.

He said he would advise prefects, the highest state representative in the various French regions, that the wearing of such veils is a motive for not granting 10-year residence cards.

Besson said he was prepared to put the measures before Parliament to make them law. In November, Besson ordered a nationwide debate on the French identity, to conclude by the end of January with possible measures.

President Nicolas Sarkozy is the force behind both the national identity campaign and the targeting of full-body veils, which he has said are not “welcome.” Critics claim he is playing to traditional far-right fears of Immigration, particularly by Muslims.

There is concern that some immigrants and citizens, including members of its Muslim population — at 5 million the largest in western Europe — are failing to fully integrate and even defying the nation’s secular values.

A law was passed in 2004 banning Muslim headscarves from classrooms.

Copyright © 2009, Chicago Tribune

Motivational Mondays: Niqab Ban in Egypt

5 Oct

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Egypt’s highest Muslim authority has said he will issue a religious edict against the growing trend for full women’s veils, known as the niqab.

Sheikh Mohamed Tantawi, dean of al-Azhar university, called full-face veiling a custom that has nothing to do with the Islamic faith.

Although most Muslim women in Egypt wear the Islamic headscarf, increasing numbers are adopting the niqab as well.

The practice is widely associated with more radical trends of Islam.

The niqab question reportedly arose when Sheikh Tantawi was visiting a girls’ school in Cairo at the weekend and asked one of the students to remove her niqab.

The Egyptian newspaper al-Masri al-Yom quoted him expressing surprise at the girl’s attire and telling her it was merely a tradition, with no connection to religion or the Koran.

*Just a reminder…”Motivational Mondays” are not always going to be good articles, happy articles or articles that I agree with. They are going to be articles about important issues that are affecting our community.*

What do you think of this story? What are your thoughts about the niqab being banned in European countries and now in a Muslim one?

Please share your ideas, comment and opinions!

Belgian Schools Ban Hijab

22 Sep

*Please make Du’a for your Belgium sisters. They are experiencing extreme discrimination and hatred.*

Satellite

Belgian Schools Ban Hijab

BRUSSELS — Dutch-language public schools in Belgium will ban the wearing of hijab in classes, following the suit of many European countries.

“This decision promotes the feeling of equality and prevents group formation or segregation on the basis of external symbols of life philosophy,” the schools said in a statement cited by Reuters on Friday, September 11.

The ban will affect 700 schools in the northern region of Flanders, including some in Brussels.

School officials argue that the ban was taken to guarantee equal treatment of all pupils within the school grounds.

“There is a problem when there is pressure on one group because we want to live together in reciprocity and it’s very important for us,” Karin Heremans, the headmistress of a Dutch-language school, told Euronews.

“Everyone has to feel good in this school, so a social minority here became majority. So it was a problem.”

Most schools in Flanders are Catholic and run by municipalities.

Schools in Flanders that are financed by other Belgian communities are not bound by the ban.

Islam sees hijab as an obligatory code of dress, not a religious symbol displaying one’s affiliations.

Verdict

The ban comes ahead of a court ruling on a decision by two Dutch-language schools in the northern city of Antwerp to ban the Muslim veil.

Last week, the two schools banned the Muslim veil at the start of the school year, arguing that Muslim girls were being pressured to wear the headscarf.

The ban triggered protests from angry students and one girl filed a complaint in court to contest the ban.

The tribunal ruled on Tuesday that schools could not take such decisions on their own.

The court will rule on the student’s appeal next Tuesday — prompting the community’s education board to make public its unified stance on Friday.

The protests over the ban, with banners reading “No headscarves, no pupils” and “Everybody free except us”, have been front-page news in Belgium.

A similar debate is underway in Belgium’s French-speaking Wallonia, and the Brussels capital region.

Hijab has been thrust into the limelight since France banned it in public schools and institutions back in 2004.

Several European countries have since followed the French lead.

Belgium has a Muslim minority of 450,000, about half of them are from Moroccan origin, while 120,000 are from Turkish origin.

Abercrombie & Fitch Sued Over Muslim Teen

19 Sep

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Abercrombie & Fitch sued over Muslim teen

TULSA (AP) — A federal lawsuit filed against clothing retailer Abercrombie & Fitch alleges that the manager at an Oklahoma store refused to hire a 17-year-old Muslim girl because she wore a head scarf.

Attorneys for the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission filed the lawsuit Wednesday in U.S. District Court in Tulsa.

According to the suit, Samantha Elauf applied for a sales position at the Abercrombie Kids store in the Woodland Hills Mall in Tulsa in June 2008. The teen, who wears a hijab, says the manager told her the head scarf violates the store’s “Look Policy.”

A company spokeswoman declined to comment on the lawsuit but said Abercrombie & Fitch has a strong equal employment opportunity policy and accommodates religious practices when possible.

Religious Leaders Oppose Swiss Ban on Minarets

11 Sep

minaretx

Religious leaders oppose Swiss ban on mosque minarets

By Stephen Brown, Religion News Service
GENEVA — The Swiss Council of Religions, which includes Jewish, Christian and Muslim leaders, has issued a statement rejecting a call for a nationwide ban on the construction of minarets at mosques. Some Swiss groups want to ban minarets out of fear of Europe’s growing Muslim population.

“For the members of a religious community, religious buildings are not only places to gather but also a symbol of their faith and an expression of their reverence for God. For many Muslims, therefore, mosques need to have minarets,” the council said in a 5-page statement issued Wednesday.

“The prohibition of minarets would injure these people in their dignity and their basic right to practice their religion,” the council warned.

The move to ban the construction of minarets was submitted in July 2008 with just under 115,000 signatures, and will be decided in a national referendum on Nov. 29.

If passed, the measure would amend the country’s Federal Constitution to include a new article stating that, “The construction of minarets is prohibited.”

The statement by the Council of Religions is the first time the national body has issued a joint statement about a national referendum, council leaders said in Bern.

The Swiss Protestant news agency ProtestInfo quoted the Rev. Thomas Wipf, president of the Federation of Swiss Protestant Churches and a member of the religions council, saying, “Cultural diversity is a characteristic of Swiss identity. It makes Switzerland strong.”

The council said it is committed to protecting religious peace in Switzerland, and that the initiative to ban the building of minarets would cause dissension.

“Everyone has the right in this country to live their faith visibly, freely and in a community within the framework of the public order,” it stated. “This also includes the construction of places of worship that are typical for their respective religions.”