Liberation by Veil

Liberation by the Veil


Modesty and chastity , very important ideologies with Islam, are achieved by prescribing standards on behavior and the dress of a Muslim. A woman who adheres to the tenements of Islam is required to follow the dress code called Hijab, other synonymes are Veil, Purdah, or just Covering. It is an act of faith and establishes a Muslim’s life with honor, respect and dignity. The Hijab is viewed as a liberation for women, in that the covering brings about “an aura of respect” (Takim, 22) and women are recognized as individuals who are admired for their mind and personality, “not for their beauty or lack of it” ( Mustafa ) and not as sex objects.
Contrary to popular belief, the covering of the Muslim woman is not oppression but a liberation from the shackles of male scrutiny and the standards of attractiveness. In Islam, a woman is free to be who she is inside, and immuned from being portrayed as sex symbol and lusted after. Islam exalts the status of a woman by commanding that she "enjoys equal rights to those of man in everything, she stands on an equal footing with man " (Nadvi, 11) and both share mutual rights and obligations in all aspects of life.

Men and women though equal are not identical, and each compliments the other in the different roles and functions that they are responsible to. " From an Islamic perspective, to view a woman as a sex symbol is to denigrate her. Islam believes that a woman is to be judged by her [virtuous] character and actions rather than by her looks or physical features" (Takim, 22). In the article, “My Body Is My Own Business”, Ms. Naheed Mustafa , a young Canadian born and raised, university-educated Muslim woman writes, “The Quran which is the Holy Book for Muslims] teaches us that men and women are equal, that individuals should not be judged according to gender, beauty, wealth or privilege. The only thing that makes one person better than another is his or her character.” She goes on to say, “In the Western world, the hijab has come to symbolize either forced silence or radical, unconscionable militancy. Actually, its neither. It is simply a woman’s assertion that judgement of her physical person is to play no role whatsoever in social interaction.”

Muslims believe that God gave beauty to all women, but that her beauty is not be seen by the world, as if the women are meat on the shelf to be picked and looked over. When she covers herself she puts herself on a higher level and men will look at her with respect and she is noticed for her intellect , faith ,and personality, not for her beauty. In many societies, especially in the West, women are taught from early childhood that their worth is proportional to their attractiveness and are compelled to follow the male standards of beauty and abstract notions of what is attractive, half realizing that such pursuit is futile and often humiliating (Mustafa).

Chastity , modesty, and piety are promoted by the institution of veiling. “The hijab in no way prevents a woman from playing her role as an important individual in a society nor does it make her inferior.” (Takim,22)

A Muslim woman may wear whatever she pleases in the presence of her husband and family or among women friends. But when she goes out or when men other than her husband or close family are present she is expected to wear a dress which will cover [her hair and] all parts of her body , and not reveal her figure. What a contrast with Western fashions which every year concentrate quite intentionally on exposing yet another erogenous zone to the public gaze! The intention of Western dress is to reveal the figure, while the intention of Muslim dress is to conceal [and cover] it, at least in public (Lemu,25).

The Muslim woman does not feel the pressures to be beautiful or attractive, which is so apparent in the Western and Eastern cultures. She does not have to live up to expectations of what is desirable and what is not. Superficial beauty is not the Muslim woman’s concern, her main goal is inner spiritual beauty. She does not have to use her body and charms to get recognition or acceptance in society. It is very different from the cruel methods that other societies subject women, in that their worth is always judged by their physical appearance. The are numerous examples of discrimination at the workplace where women are either accepted or rejected, because of their attractiveness and sex appeal.

Another benefit of adorning the veil is that it is a protection for women. Muslims believe that when women display their beauty to everybody, they degrade themselves by becoming objects of sexual desire and become vulnerable to men, who look at them as " gratification for the sexual urge"(Nadvi,8). The Hijab makes them out as women belonging to the class of modest chaste women, so that transgressors and sensual men may recognize them as such and dare not tease them out of mischief" (Nadvi, 20). Hijab solves the problem of sexual harrassment and unwanted sexual advances, which is so demeaning for women, when men get mixed signals and believe that women want their advances by the way they reveal their bodies.

The western idiology of, ‘if you have it, you should flash it!’ is quite opposite to the Islamic principle,where the purpose is not to bring attention to ones self, but to be modest. Women in so many societies are just treated as sex symbols and nothing more than just a body who “display themselves to get attention” (Mustafa) . A good example is in advertising, where a woman’s body is used to sell products. Women are constantly degraded, and subjected to reveal more and more of themselves. .

The Covering sanctifies her and forces society to hold her in high esteem. Far from humiliating the woman, Hijab actually grants the woman an aura of respect, and bestows upon her a separate and unique identity (Takim, 22). According to the Qu’ran, the same high standards of moral conduct are for men as it is for women. Modesty is essential in a man’s life, as well, whether it be in action, morals or speech. Islam also commands proper behavior and dress of men, in that they are not allowed to make a wanton show of their bodies to attract attention onto themselves, and they too must dress modestly. They have a special commandment to lower their eyes, and not to brazenly stare at women.

In Sura Nur of the Holy Qu’ran it says, " Say to the believing men that they should lower their gaze and guard their modesty; that will make for greater purity for them, and God is well acquainted with what they do". Many of the misconceptions of the Muslim woman in the west, particularly her veil stems from Arab and Muslim countries that have deviated from the true doctrines of Islam, and have " mixed up Islamic principles with pre-Islamic pagan traditions" (Bahnassawi, 67)

In this present period of decline from Islam, many Muslim women are alienated , isolated from social life, and are oppressed by Muslim men and rulers who use the name of religion for their injustices. (Bahnassawi, 65) In this instance, the Hijab is used as a means of keeping many Muslim women away from society, with the misconception that it signifies isolation and weakness. But as many Muslim women come back into the fold of the untainted and true Islam, they are able to recognize the injustice of men who have for so long stripped them of their rights to be an integral part of society and “deserving the same dignity, honor, progress and prosperity as the men” (Nadvi,26). Women regaining their true identity and role in society, are now wearing Hijab and embracing its concept of liberation for women, and are taking their rightful places that Islam had endowed upon them fourteen hundred years ago.


Works Cited
Bahnassawi, El Salem. Woman Between Islam and World Legislations. Trans. Abdul Fattah El-Shaer. Kuwait: Dar ul Qalam, 1985.

Lemu, Aisha and Fatima Heeren. Woman in Islam. England: Islamic COE, 1978.

Mustafa, Naheed. “My Body is My Own Business.” Shia International. Oct. 1993: 29.

Nadvi, Mohammad. Modesty and Chastity in Islam. Kuwait: Islamic Bk, 1982.

Takim, Liyakatali. “The Islamic and Muslim View of Women.” Shia International. Oct. 1993: 22.

Re: Liberation by Veil

Excellent article!

Re: Liberation by Veil

True liberation is found in the minds and hearts of people. When men stop objectifying women, only then will they be truly liberated. While some believe it helps, a piece of cloth will not provide this, it's only a symbol of perceived status.

True liberation is found when men learn to respect women by not judging them from their appearance and shape, but their character. And women learn to respect themselves by not wearing immoral dress in public places where they come across a lot of stranger men. When the media stop presenting women as sexual objects and decoration pieces by removing their clothes and adding more paint to them whenever they have to advertise anything that is at times not even related to women.

Like men, woman's grace is also in her modesty, elegance, character, mannerism, bashfulness and her personality which is unfortunately given less importance compared to displaying of assets in a lot of so called developed societies.

May Allah (s.w.t) bless us with wisdom of following the right path.

Modesty is 100% subjective. There are several tribal cultures where women do not cover their breasts, and wear loin cloths. Those women are in no more danger of being sexually harassed than women who cover themselves. It is all based on the society and current culture, which is always changing. Do not confuse biology with socialization, and do not equate subjectivity with objectivity.

You are attributing conditioned feminine mannerisms with biology, which is not the case.

As I said, liberation is in the minds of the people. The less we view women as being purely sexual beings (the more we cover, the more sexualized we become), then they will be free.

Re: Liberation by Veil

What about girls who wear the hijab (or are forced to) but put fancy clips on them? wear them in different colours? wear tight jeans with them and flaunt their cute butt? Wear make up? Perfumes? How does that go with the 'moderation'?

You force them to wear that cloth and they find ways to go around it and still flaunt their sexuality.

Re: Liberation by Veil

when the body is decently covered, the intellect gets engaged.

& that is where men and women should also excel in inspiring each other by morality & virtues-driven, characters.

Re: Liberation by Veil

It all comes down the orders of Allah. There are no ifs and buts with the orders of Allah. If you do have a problem with the orders of Allah, may Allah guide you...

ps: Hijab is an order of Allah.

Re: Liberation by Veil

the whole concept of orders and submission sounds very unreasonable to me ... medieval fabrications ?

Yes! i do agree to the certain extent. But appearance does matter. All of these things are linked and have a internal bond with each other.

Appearence, you will dress modest and in a way, you answered your own query. Media does have a knock on effect but i think women are totally to blame, obviously i am not blaming anyone , but** a swing always swings both ways.
**

I personally believe a hijab adds to a beauty of a woman. Veil is mustahib though, basically it's your choice.

If that's your explanation of it's merits. But once you step outside those boundaries and start attributing qualities to hijab, then you deal with rational, and logical rebuttals.

The more a woman covers, the more of her is forbidden, and thus, the more sexualized she becomes.

Most people don't realize this.

The more that is taboo, the more you objectify a person.

true.. hence all the hijab/burqa porn out there.. some of them actually get non-muslim white girls to wear hijab/burqa just for the shoots...

I was watching on TV that according to US department of crime, with every single passing minute a girl is being raped in USA.

And when they asked the culprits the reason, 95% of them gave this reason:

The victim was wearing revealing dress that seduced them.

No matter how many times you move the bee away, it would always come back to the flower that is more "colorful" and "sweet smelling" because it is in its nature to be attracted by it.

Do an experiment. Pass by a street full of beggars while having a colorful and delicious looking cake in you hand. You would see those beggars looking at the cake with their eyes wide open and tongue hanging outside. Some of them might even try to snatch the cake from your hands by request or by force.

Now pass by the same street with the same cake but this time completely covered. Very few of the beggars would bother to even have a second look at it. It is part of human psychology.

rational/logical rebuttals,? against Allah's orders? against the sunnah?

And that is complete bull****. I am a sociologist and I have made it a lifes goal to study violence against women. I have read, studied, and composed research papers on the subject, and no where has the stereotype of dress leading on a perpetrator ever been substantiated. It is a cop out for men who manipulate the masses into finding some outlet of sympathy for them i.e. that they were somehow not fully responsible for their deeds. I have ALSO interviewed several convicted rapists and worked as a counselor in crisis centers. Your analysis and whatever program you watched (I'm waiting for the name of it, btw), is completely erroeneous.

The prevelance of rape is 100% based on the woman's status in society, and how she is viewed by her male counterparts as a human being. The ONLY correlation between rape and clothing are LOOSE clothing, dresses, skirts (of any length), and long hair. It's easier to rape a woman in an abaya and a hijab than it is to rape a woman in jeans.

Women are not CAKE. They are human beings. Even your mentality is one shared by rapists, equating women to objects of property. Stop spreading this crap, it only leads to more violence. The more you objectify a woman (which you are doing), the less rights and respect she incurs from you. You may think you respect women, but you only do when they fall into the neat little package you have established for what a woman of worth is. It's EXACTLY the same mentality as rapists.

No. When you start attributing other values to something that are not prescribed.

Read it again, and stop jumping to defensive conclusions in order to dismiss what I say. It's disgusting.

I agree with everything Matinee Siren already pointed out about your post...I just wanted to bring up the utter ridiculousness of the made-up statistics you're quoting.

First of all, if according to the "department of crime" (which, btw, does not exist), a woman is raped every second in the US, that means that 31,536,000 women are raped here every year. That means that over 25% of the adult female population gets raped every year. Does that sound even remotely believable to you?

For those who are curious, in 2005 the FBI reported a grand total of less than 94,000 reported rape cases in the US...a figure about 335 times smaller than what STP is claiming above.

Try exercising some common sense before you try making up statistics in the future.

As for this nonsense about cake and "95% of rapes being driven by lust" (we all know how reliable your statistics are), psychologists have soundly debunked that theory. Tell me, if rape is driven by spur of the moment desire, like beggars grabbing at cake, why do "unattractive" females, from infants to bedridden old ladies, raped? And why have studies found that over 70% of rapes are premeditated?

Re: Liberation by Veil

those who wear the hijab but still find ways to be revealing are confused about their identity and which culture they belong to. what they need to understand is that even if their wearing short tops and tite jeans...but still have a piece of material on their heads, they will be seen as a muslim...so those ppl need to consider this point...is it more important to fit in (even though every1 will still noe ur muslim)...or is it more important to abide by Allah's rules???

may those ppl who are on the verge of wrongoing, be blessed with Allah's mercy and may they be truly inspired by Islam and all the rights that it has given to us females.

Re: Liberation by Veil

just to add on....this is a really good thread!!!