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The Burqa Is A Coffin: A Muslim Feminist Speaks Out
By Yasmin Alibahi-Brown
Yasmin Alibahi-Brown, a Muslim feminist, speaks out against the veil (hat
tip to Alison of IBA-UK):
Sunday,
December 03, 2006
Jack
Straw’s politics usually make me either furious or bilious. That stammer, that
fake sincerity, that oily handshake he extends to ‘ethnic minorities’, his
immoral support for the ignominious war in Iraq and domestic laws that curtail
civil liberties, the unholy fiefdom he runs in Blackburn- the list is long.
Suddenly the expedient appeaser has come out against the veil and I find myself
agreeing with his every word. It is time to speak out against this objectionable
garment and face down the Islamicists who endlessly bait and intimidate the
state making demands that violate its fundamental principles.
A
blizzard of protest has blown up and Straw has been denounced an Islamaphobic by
these ideologues who have reverted to what they do best, group blackmail. As
reactionary have been the views of feminist white women who attack Straw for
being aggressively proscriptive. As a man, they say, he has no business telling
women what to wear. As an MP, I say, he has an obligation to express his
concerns to his constituents. We don’t yet live in an Islamic Republic where men
and women are forced to live on separate planets.
Millions of Muslims in Europe abhor these obscurantists. That they have
brainwashed young women, born free, to seek subjugation breaks our hearts.
Trained creatures often prefer to stay in their cages even when released. I
don’t call that a choice. A liberal nation has no obligation to extend its
liberalism to condone the most illiberal practices as long as it ensures genuine
equal standards for all.
The
media lurches drunkenly between pandering to Muslim separatists and maligning us
all as the aliens within. It is hard to be a Muslim today. And it becomes harder
still when some choose deliberately to act and dress as aliens. The young women
in niqab who claim they have made the decision without coercion understand
nothing about the sacred Islamic texts, struggles for gender equality, history
or the unpleasantly sexual symbolism of what they claim is just one more
lifestyle choice.
‘Oh I
won’t have that green coat, think it is the black shroud for me, suits me better
don’t you think?’
Britons who support them are clueless about the silent march of Wahabism. I have
been uncomfortable for years about the rapid spread of the hijab too because for
Islamicist puritans it is the first staging post on a road map that leads to the
burkha, where even the eyes are gauzed over. Some young hijabis say they feel
wanton and must go ‘higher’ to the niqab.. So when does this country decide that
it does not want citizens using their freedoms to build a satellite Saudi Arabia
here?
We
can’t answer that question because Islamicists say we are not allowed such
national conversations. Straw isn’t because he is a white man; Deborah Orr isn’t
because she is a white woman; parliament can’t because there is no Muslim woman
MP in it; I am not because I am a bad Muslim. Well stuff that I say.
The Koran does not
ask us to bury ourselves. We must be modest. These fools who are taking niqab
will one day suffocate like I did but they will not be allowed to leave the
coffin.
They
are choosing something they don’t even understand.’ The sexual signals of the
hijab and niqab are even more suspect. They are physical manifestation of the
pernicious idea of women as carriers of Original Sin whose cheek or a lock of
hair turns Muslim men into predators. In Denmark a mufti said unveiled women
asked for rape.
As if
to order, rape by Muslim men of white women is rising alarmingly. In truth half
naked women and veiled women are both beings solely defined by sexuality. One
group proffers it, the other withholds it. A six year old girl in a boob tube
and in hijab are both symbols of unhealthy sexual objectification. Western
culture is wildly sexualised and lacking in restraint. There are ways to avoid
falling into that pit and the veil is not one of them
The niqab expunges
the female Muslim presence from the landscape handing the world over to men.
It rejects human
commonalities and membership of society itself.
The women observe
fellow citizens but remain unseen, like CCTV cameras. They dehumanize themselves
and us.
There
are practical issues too.
I have seen appallingly beaten Muslim
women forced into the niqab to keep their wounds hidden.
Veiled women cannot swim in the sea, smile at their babies in parks, feel the
sun on their skin. How are passports to be checked and exams taken? Women can
wear what they want in their homes and streets, but there are societal dress
codes. Public and private institutions should have the right to ask citizens to
show their faces to get goods and services. Hoodies and crash helmet wearers
already have to. Why should niqabis be exempt?
Source:
http://ibloga.blogspot.com/2006/12/burqa-is-coffin-muslim-feminist-speaks.html
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