|

To Wear or Not to Wear the Hijab
Hafsa Kanjwal and
Khadijeh Zarafshar
Washington, D.C.

We are American Muslim
women, who strongly identify with our faith.
We are Georgetown University seniors who
remain active and involved with the American
Muslim community. One of us wears a
headscarf, known in Arabic as the hijab. The
other does not. Yet the right to wear the
headscarf—without censure, condemnation, or
patronizing pity—is a right we both defend.
The notion of the sexually exotic but
tragically repressed Muslim woman has
resided within the Western consciousness
since the West first interacted with the
Muslim world. In an article that appeared in
Islamica Magazine, Mohja Kahf, a
professor at the University of Arkansas,
links this hackneyed character to the "era
of Romantic literature, and the Byronic plot
of a white man saving a harem girl, [which]
continued to thrive in the heyday of
European colonialism, feeding a white
Christian supremacist hero complex."
In modern times,
the veil has become an emotionally charged
symbol of the struggle between tradition and
modernity, between Islam and the West. It
has arguably served as a partial political
justification for certain policies
spearheaded by the United States to
"liberate Muslim women" in Afghanistan or
Iraq. We, as American Muslim women, simply
by living our dual identity, demand a
re-evaluation of this externally imposed
dichotomy. As Americans, it is not our place
to speak on behalf of the women of other
nations. What we can do is share our
experiences and insights into what hijab
means to us, here in the United States.
Muslim women are not a monolithic entity.
One might think that this sentence is
stating the obvious, yet we often encounter
peers and professors alike who fail to
understand that the broad, abstract concepts
they encounter in academia do not take the
same invariable form when actualized in the
lives of real people. It is only to be
expected, then, that the reasons and
motivations behind wearing the headscarf,
and the form it takes, are not uniform.
Many assume that a covered woman is a
repressed woman, forced by some male
authority figure to dress a certain way.
In reality, it is this profoundly prejudiced
projection of ignorance onto our beliefs
that is constraining, insulting, and, in a
twisted, hypocritical gesture of concern,
serves only to undermine our autonomy and
intelligence.
It is important here to clarify that wearing
the hijab is not a pillar of Islam. It is
directly related to the notion of modesty,
which is an essential virtue that Muslims,
men and women, are enjoined upon to embody.
We say this not to devalue it, but simply to
point out that the breadth of Islamic
teachings and practices extend far beyond a
piece of cloth. Yet we wish to address the
hijab specifically because it is so deeply
misunderstood by many and is representative
of general misconceptions of Islam.
If you ask Muslim women why they do or do
not wear the hijab, you will come across no
simple answer. Perhaps the most prevalent
reason offered for wearing the headscarf is
one of sincere conviction—women believe it
is obligatory according to the teachings of
Islam, and reference the Qur'anic verse in
which women are instructed "not to display
their charms [in public] beyond what may be
apparent thereof; hence, let them draw their
head-coverings over their bosoms" (Qur'an,
24:31).
Some women wear a headscarf because they
want to express their Muslim identity
visibly. Other women may wear the hijab as
protection, because according to her
conceptualization, she does not have to
reveal her body to strange men. And for
others, the hijab serves as a personal,
constant reminder to remain true to the
values that Islam espouses.
Standing out in a society that places such
emphasis on physical attractiveness is not
easy, and is often uncomfortable. The women
who do decide to cover their hair—in direct
contradiction of the values and standards of
the mainstream society to which we
belong—require conviction, strength of will,
and a deep, personal understanding of its
significance.
For those who chose not to wear the hijab,
the reasoning also differs. Some Muslim
women interpret the aforementioned Qur'anic
verse differently; they believe that
although the principles of modesty are
mentioned and extolled upon in the Qur'an,
donning the headscarf is more of a cultural
interpretation or continuation rather than a
requirement. Others may feel that although
it is important, it does not reflect their
personal level of spirituality or religious
practice.
There is a somewhat prevalent perception
that women who wear the headscarf must abide
by a certain standard of behavior; this view
oftentimes deters women from covering their
hair. Others believe that the values the
headscarf espouses can be manifested in
other ways. While wearing the headscarf may
have been important in the past,
today—especially in the United States—a
veiled woman will garner more attention,
rather than less attention, which goes
contrary to the headscarf allowing women to
engage in society without being judged for
her personal appearance.
At the end of the day, why a woman wears the
headscarf is her personal decision. It is
important that those looking at the
headscarf from outside the tradition keep an
open mind—open enough to let the true
reasons and motivations of Muslim women in.
To do anything less is a profound injustice
¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤
|