By: YVONNE RIDLEY
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Special to The Washington Post
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LONDON -- I used to look at veiled women as quiet, oppressed
creatures -- until I was captured by the Taliban.
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In September 2001, just 15 days after the terrorist attacks on
the United States, I sneaked into Afghanistan, clad in a head-to-toe blue
burqa, intending to write a newspaper account of life under the repressive
regime. Instead, I was discovered, arrested and detained for 10 days. I spat
and swore at my captors; they called me a "bad" woman but let me go
after I promised to read the Quran and study Islam. (I'm not sure who was
happier when I was freed -- they or I.)
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Back home in London, I kept my word about studying Islam -- and
was amazed by what I discovered. I'd been expecting Quranic chapters on how
to beat your wife and oppress your daughters; instead, I found passages
promoting the liberation of women. Two and a half years after my capture, I
converted to Islam, provoking a mixture of astonishment, disappointment and
encouragement among friends and relatives.
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With disgust and dismay, I watched here in Britain as former
Foreign Secretary Jack Straw described the Muslim niqab -- a face veil that
reveals only the eyes -- as an unwelcome barrier to integration, with Prime
Minister Tony Blair, writer Salman Rushdie and even Italian Prime Minister
Romano Prodi leaping to his defense.
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Having been on both sides of the veil, I can tell you that most
Western male politicians and journalists who lament the oppression of women
in the Islamic world have no idea what they are talking about. They go on
about veils, child brides, female circumcision, honor killings and forced
marriages, and they wrongly blame Islam for all this, their arrogance
surpassed only by their ignorance.
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These cultural issues and customs have nothing to do with Islam.
A careful reading of the Quran shows that just about everything that Western
feminists fought for in the 1970s was available to Muslim women 1,400 years
ago. Women in Islam are considered equal to men in spirituality, education
and worth, and a woman's gift for childbirth and child-rearing is regarded as
a positive attribute.
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When Islam offers women so much, why are Western men so obsessed
with Muslim women's attire? Even British government ministers Gordon Brown
and John Reid have made disparaging remarks about the niqab -- and they hail
from Scotland, where men wear skirts.
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A personal statement When I converted to Islam and began wearing
a headscarf, the repercussions were enormous. All I did was cover my head and
hair -- but I instantly became a second-class citizen. I knew I'd hear from
the odd Islamophobe, but I didn't expect so much open hostility.
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Cabs passed me by at night, their "for hire" lights
glowing. One cabbie, after dropping off a white passenger in front of me,
glared at me when I rapped on his window; he drove off. Another said,
"Don't leave a bomb in the back seat" and asked, "Where's bin
Laden hiding?"
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Yes, it is a religious obligation for Muslim women to dress
modestly, but the majority of Muslim women I know like wearing the hijab,
which leaves the face uncovered, though a few prefer the niqab. It is a
personal statement: My dress tells you that I am a Muslim and that I expect
to be treated respectfully, much as a Wall Street banker would say that a
business suit defines him as an executive to be taken seriously. Among
converts to the faith like me, the attention of men who confront women with
inappropriate, leering behavior is not tolerable.
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I was a Western feminist for many years, but I've discovered that
Muslim feminists are more radical than their secular counterparts. We hate
those ghastly beauty pageants and tried to stop laughing in 2003 when judges
of the Miss Earth competition hailed the emergence of a bikini-clad Miss
Afghanistan, Vida Samadzai, as a giant leap for women's liberation. They even
gave Samadzai a special award for "representing the victory of women's
rights."
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Some young Muslim feminists also consider the hijab and the niqab
political symbols, a way of rejecting Western excesses such as binge
drinking, casual sex and drug use. What is more liberating: being judged on
the length of your skirt and the size of your surgically enhanced breasts, or
being judged on your character and intelligence? In Islam, superiority is
achieved through piety -- not beauty, wealth, power, position or sex.
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I didn't know whether to scream or laugh when Italy's Prodi
joined the debate by declaring that it is "common sense" not to
wear the niqab because it makes social relations "more difficult."
Nonsense. If this were the case, why are cellphones, land lines, e-mail, text
messaging and fax machines in daily use? And no one switches off the radio
because they can't see the presenter's face.
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Under Islam, I am respected. It tells me that I have a right to
an education and that it is my duty to seek out knowledge, regardless of
whether I am single or married. Nowhere in the framework of Islam are we told
that women must wash, clean or cook for men.
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As for how Muslim men are allowed to beat their wives -- it's
simply not true. Critics of Islam will quote random Quranic verses or hadith,
but usually out of context. If a man does raise a finger against his wife, he
is not allowed to leave a mark on her body, which is the Quran's way of
saying, "Don't beat your wife, stupid."
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And in the West ...?
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It is not just Muslim men who must re-evaluate the place and
treatment of women. According to a recent National Domestic Violence Hotline
survey, 4 million American women experience a serious assault by a partner
during an average 12-month period. More than three women are killed by their
husbands and boyfriends every day -- that is nearly 5,500 since 9-11.
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Violent men don't come from any particular religious or cultural
category; one in three women around the world has been beaten, coerced into
sex or otherwise abused in her lifetime, according to the hotline survey.
This is a global problem that transcends religion, wealth, class, race and
culture.
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But in the West, men still believe that they are superior to
women. They still receive better pay for equal work -- whether in the
mailroom or the boardroom -- and still treat women as sexualized commodities
whose power and influence flow directly from their appearance.
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And for those who are still trying to claim that Islam oppresses
women, recall this 1992 statement from the Rev. Pat Robertson, offering his
views on empowered women: Feminism is a "socialist, anti-family
political movement that encourages women to leave their husbands, kill their
children, practice witchcraft, destroy capitalism and become lesbians."
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Now you tell me who is civilized and who is not.
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Yvonne Ridley is political editor of Islam Channel TV in London. Yvonne Ridley is co-author of "In the Hands of the Taliban: Her Extraordinary Story" (Robson Books). This essay appeared previously in The Washington Post. hermosh@aol.com |
Source:
http://www.dfw.com/mld/dfw/news/opinion/16095998.htm?template=contentModules/printstory.jsp
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