miércoles, julio 14, 2010

UNA MUJER SAUDÍ comenta la prohibición del velo en Occidente:
Covering the face has been a highly emotional and politicized issue in the Muslim community for the past two decades. I have written about it before and called it the sixth pillar of Islam. It has become a false banner for Islamic piety. Islam is now reduced to a dress code. It does not matter if you lie, steal or slander your friends and neighbors, if you cover your face you are perceived by society as an untouchable religious God fearing person.

[...] Covering the face is the very essence of objectifying women. With her face covered, a woman is reduced to an object that needs to be protected by a male guardian. For every woman who truly chooses of her own freewill to cover her face, there are hundreds if not thousands forced and pressured to by the religious establishment, family and society.


[...] What are women covering from? They believe that the sight of their face will cause men to commit sin. Fitna they call it. And yet the places where most women cover their faces, like in Saudi’s central region, you can’t take a step outside your house without being harassed, it doesn’t matter if you’re 18 or 80. It’s much more dangerous to walk the streets of Riyadh as a woman than it is in New York. Hence what the face cover is protecting us from has proven to be the complete opposite upon implementation.

It doesn’t stop at face covering. The subtle difference between putting the abaya tent style over your head or leaving it like a cloak on your shoulders decides if you’re “asking for it”. In both cases the face is covered but in the first the shape of the shoulders isn’t defined and so it’s a more religious and respectable style. Covering the face escalates into such silly issues like the seductive powers of a woman’s toes. Isn’t it about time that men take responsibility for their actions instead of using the centuries old argument “she seduced me into it by not dressing properly”?!

How many public Islamist women figures (do they even exist?) do you know advocate face covering? The majority out there calling for it are men; Muslim men who brazenly stand there in Western clothes and with clean shaven faces and say it’s their religious belief that women should cover. Walk down Oxford Street London in July and see how many abaya swathed women with their niqabs are accompanied by their shorts wearing clean shaven male guardians.
Leedlo entero, y después no os perdáis lo que escribe también hoy Quim Monzó:
El domingo, el Magazine publicó diversas cartas a propósito de un reportaje de semanas atrás sobre cuatro chicas que llevan niqab. Todas las cartas menos una lamentan la falta de respeto que las chicas muestran hacia sí mismas y hacia las demás mujeres, y lo retrógrado de los argumentos que usan para justificar su viaje al medioevo. Se muestran orgullosas de no estudiar y de vivir condenadas a no poder salir de casa sin permiso. Uno de los puntos que más indignan a quienes escriben es que, además, critiquen la forma de vestir y de vivir de las mujeres de este país, a las que acusan de provocadoras y casi de buscar que los hombres las agredan. Curiosamente, la única carta condescendiente con ellas la firma un hombre, Artur Guinovart, que dice que "hay que comprender la dificultad que entraña la adaptación al país de acogida...".